Startup decade in full flow thanks to fund commitment
Despite obstacles caused by the global health crisis, foreign investors and an alliance of venture capital funds have committed over $900 million for Vietnamese entrepreneurship, showing their trust in the potential of the domestic startup ecosystem.
At the Vietnam Venture Summit 2020 co-organised by the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI), the Ministry of Science and Technology, and Golden Gate Venture in Hanoi, 33 venture capital funds committed to pouring $815 million into the Vietnamese startup ecosystem in the next five years, committing twice as much capital as during the first summit last year.
The venture capital funds included VinaCapital Ventures, 500 Startups, Alpha JWC, BeeNext, CyberAgent Capital, Do Ventures, ThinkZone, Vietrans, among others.
In the framework of the innovative startup festival Techfest Vietnam, one investor group among the delegation included a dozen distinguished entrepreneurs and investors from Germany, Switzerland, and Israel, who decided to establish a $100-million venture fund dedicated exclusively to Vietnam’s digital startups, excluding other commitments that arose during the four-day festival.
Philipp Rösler, former German Federal Minister of Economics and Technology and former Vice Chancellor of Germany who was born in Vietnam, commented, “Financiers are fascinated by the startup environment and dynamics in the country. In addition, the excellent management of the COVID-19 crisis by the Vietnamese government has improved the investment environment significantly in recent last months. At the same time, Vietnam has also manufactured high-quality surgical instruments and distributed them across the world, which helps position the nation as an ideal location for the production of medical equipment.”
Le Han Tue Lam, general manager of Nextrans – one of South Korea’s most active micro-investment and consulting firms – told VIR, “Although we cannot disclose the financial commitment and the beneficiaries at the Vietnam Venture Summit 2020, we are willing to support local startups in tech, fintech, and logistics. We selected beneficiaries based on market share, selling prices, and the effectiveness of products. However, the capacity of the founder team is also an important criterion.”
Nextrans reportedly pumped capital into 20 Vietnamese startups, including Luxstay, an online short-term rentals platform, and hospitality service Base – Asia’s first open platform for comprehensive enterprise solutions, recruitment services provider TopCV, and logistics startup EcoTruck.
Realising 2030 targets
According to the Organising Board of the Vietnam Venture Summit 2020, in the previous year, 18 domestic and international investment funds committed to investing $425 million in innovative startups in Vietnam in the 2019-2021 period. So far, the actual investment in Vietnam’s startups has reached over 50 per cent of the committed capital, despite the pandemic.
These commitments are considered a constellation of benevolent factors to nurture domestic startups to emerge as tech unicorns, which contribute to realising the national strategy on the Fourth Industrial Revolution to have at least 10 firms by 2030 with export of products and services using Industry 4.0 technologies such as 5G, the Internet of Things, and AI to G7 countries.
To create a favourable environment for entrepreneurship, the Vietnamese government issued numerous incentives to nurture and support promising local startups in their journey to become national champions in the domestic ecosystem.
At the summit, Deputy Prime Minister Vu Duc Dam said, “The government has implemented many programmes to cash in on the opportunities of the new industrial revolution, creating a playground and market space for the startup community. These programmes combine with infrastructure development and the application of IT to make sure that local manufacturers provide every Vietnamese person with a low-cost smartphone. In addition, many platforms for healthcare, education, culture, tourism, and even charity have debuted.”
The government also mobilises the power of the community to create platforms, ecosystems, and big data for the community, offering the basis for the startup community to find its business opportunities, added DPM Dam. “The foreign and domestic business communities, especially startups, need to cooperate and create a solid network which can motivate other entrepreneurs to develop their business,” he said.
Unicorn ambitions
Along with issuing policies, the MPI is proactive in cooperating with unicorns in the region and other global tech groups to provide both capital and experience and help domestic startups to grow. One of these programmes is a strategic partnership with the MPI’s National Innovation Centre and Grab, in association with Singapore’s Infocomm Media Development Authority, Gobi Partners, Toong, YKVN, Microsoft, and Amazon Web Services.
Nguyen Thai Hai Van, managing director of Grab Vietnam said, “Many startups have trouble scaling past the early stage due to difficulties in optimising funds in a high-growth and dynamic market, as well as pivoting their business models to cope with the rapidly changing landscape. As Southeast Asia’s home-grown tech company, we understand the problem and know how to scale. Thus, we would like to share that experience with Vietnamese startups through Grab Ventures Ignite.”
Grab Vietnam announced bePOS, Stringee, GoDee, Papaya, and Vbee as the five winners of the first batch of Grab Ventures Ignite, an accelerator programme dedicated to Vietnamese early-stage startups, which aims to enable them to scale up faster and create an impact on the entire tech scene in Vietnam.
Currently, Vietnam has two unicorns valued at over $1 billion including VNG and VNPay. VNG Corporation became Vietnam’s first-ever unicorn tech startup was valued at $1 billion by the World Startup Report in 2014. Recently, intermediary payment services provider VNPay was named the second unicorn startup in Vietnam in the e-Conomy SEA 2020 report by Google, Temasek and Bain & Company.
Meanwhile, Yeah1 became the first media company in Vietnam to be listed in the stock market with a corporate value of $500 million. The company’s ambition is to become the first unicorn startup in the communications industry in Southeast Asia within the next three years.
Source: VIR
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