Google in talks to invest in Indonesian e-commerce giant Tokopedia

Tokopedia is backed by SoftBank Group’s Vision Fund

(FILES) In this file photo taken on June 05, 2005 the logo of internet search engine company Google  hadquarters is seen n Mountain View in Silicon Valley, south of San Francisco.  US President Donald Trump will prolong a ban on US employment permits to year-end and broaden it to include H1-B visas used widely in the tech industry, the White House said June 22, 2020. / AFP / Nicholas KAMM
Powered by automated translation

Google and Temasek Holdings are in negotiations to join a funding round of between $500 million (Dh1.8 billion) and $1bn for Indonesian e-commerce giant Tokopedia, according to people familiar with the matter.

Tokopedia, the online marketplace backed by SoftBank Group’s Vision Fund, has held talks with US internet giants including Facebook, Microsoft and Amazon.com, the people said. But Google and Temasek have been more active in their negotiations and those talks may conclude in coming weeks.

America’s largest internet corporations have looked increasingly toward Asia as growth in the US and Europe slows, seeking to tap the region’s rapidly growing smartphone-savvy population. Facebook is buying a stake in India’s Jio Platforms, while its WhatsApp unit struck a deal last month to invest in ride-hailing and food delivery giant Gojek.

Representatives for Tokopedia and Temasek declined to comment. Google didn’t respond to an email seeking comment.

The backing of Alphabet’s Google and Singaporean state investment firm Temasek would mark a major boost for one of South East Asia’s biggest e-commerce operators. Tokopedia co-founder and chief executive William Tanuwijaya built the country’s most valuable startup after Gojek after scoring early backing from SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son and Alibaba Group Holding co-founder Jack Ma. It now plans to list shares at home as well as in another as-yet-undecided location, Mr Tanuwijaya told Bloomberg News in October.

Tokopedia came close to finalising its latest financing this year before news emerged of a recent data theft attempt that may have affected 15 million of its users, one of the people said. It was also held back by the Covid-19 pandemic, which is rapidly changing the online shopping landscape in the world’s fourth most populous nation.

E-commerce platforms are now moving quickly to serve the millions of people forced to make their first online purchases during widespread lockdowns. Singapore-based rival Shopee, a unit of Sea, is catching up, while Alibaba last month appointed a longtime veteran to head up Lazada and “fight harder” as competition heats up.

Indonesia has become a key battleground between the regional rivals: The country’s e-commerce market is projected to expand from $21bn in 2019 to $82bn by 2025, according to a recent study by Google, Temasek and Bain & Co.