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Facebook and PayPal invest in Indonesian start-up Gojek

The investment is Facebook's first in Indonesia, Southeast Asia's leading economy



An advertisement for motorbike on-demand service Go-Jek at a railway station in Jakarta. With a population of more than 250 million, a swelling middle class and growing availability of cheap mobile devices, firms from across the world are flocking to Indonesia.
Image Credit: AFP

JAKARTA - Facebook and PayPal have invested in the Indonesian ride-hailing and digital payment start-up Gojek, joining other tech giants Tencent and Google, the Jakarta-based company said Wednesday.

The new investment "will support Gojek's mission to boost Southeast Asia's digital economy, with a focus on supporting payments and financial services in the region," it said in a statement.

The size of the investment was not disclosed.

Starting as a motorcycle ride-hailing call centre in 2010, Gojek launched an app five years later that soon turned into a "super-app" offering a wide range of services including deliveries, takeaway food and financial services.

The investment is Facebook's first in Indonesia, Southeast Asia's leading economy.

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The social network behemoth is looking for new outlets for its products, particularly WhatsApp messaging, which is used everywhere in the country of more than 260 million people.

"Gojek, WhatsApp and Facebook are indispensable services in Indonesia," Matt Idema, chief operating officer at WhatsApp, said in the statement.

"Working together we can help bring millions of small businesses and the customers they serve into the largest digital economy in Southeast Asia."

PayPal's payment services are also expected to be integrated into the Gojek app as part of the agreement.

The Indonesian start-up says it has connected hundreds of thousands of traders on its platform, often small businesses in the informal economy, and has more than 170 million users in the region.

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Gojek in March raised $1.2 billion for expansion, according to Bloomberg, and it is valued at $10 billion by analysts CB Insights.

The company's main competitor is Grab, another "super-app" founded in Singapore.

Indonesia's digital sector was estimated at $40 billion in 2019 and could triple by 2025, according to a study by Google, Temasek and Bain & Company.

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