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Report claims 700 startup exits by 2025 in Southeast Asia

The upward trend of startup exits in Southeast Asia has been encouraged by the continuing growth of financial and business support offered by influential industry leaders. The region’s startup tech industry has been exploding, giving rise to foreign corporate venture capital investments and unicorn startups

INSEAD, in partnership with Golden Gate Ventures, surveyed over ten Global Pacific startups (GPs) about the startup trends in Southeast Asia. They analyzed the past fifteen years of data on initial public offerings (IPOs) and strategic mergers and acquisitions (M&As) taking a deeper look to identify tech company growth trends and predict potential tech startup exits. They anticipate at least 700 startup exits between 2023 and 2025, a number that they consider as a strong exit momentum.

“The development of entrepreneurial ecosystems in Southeast Asia is booming, and now is the best time to start a business. European and American investors want to expand their investment in the region, and the exit of the future (startups and venture capital funds) will only increase them. The growing interest of corporates in the startup space is certainly a development to watch; they may offer an additional exit avenue or fill funding gaps in certain countries.” ~ Claudia Zeisberger, Professor of Entrepreneurship & Family Enterprise at INSEAD.

Key drivers of startup exits

The main reasons for the growth in exits are:

The major players

Local companies in Indonesia, Thailand, and Singapore are the major players providing corporate investments in Southeast Asia as the number of corporate venture capital firms and investments in the past eight years has increased.

It’s not just regional players in the market. North Asia’s Mitsubishi, Hyundai, and international companies such as Naspers, Hubert Burda Media, and Rakuten are also expanding into regional enterprise ventures in Southeast Asia and creating alliances with local tech companies.

A rise in global private entity funds has increased investments over the last eight years by 30%. An example was the $4.25 billion USD funding by Warburg Pincus for the Southeast Asia-China II fund. Local venture capital funds have also increased in growth or have completed financing. Venture capital transactions increased from 230 in 2017 to 311 in 2018.

Trends

The report results

When the 10 GPs surveyed in the report were asked about the health of the startup exit environment in the Southeast Asia market:

For the survey question, “What do you think are the most important factors affecting the exit landscape?”, the GPs answered:

The increased income from venture capital investment funds will impact startup exit trends in Southeast Asia, with more companies reaching maturity and becoming acquisition targets for other tech companies, multinational corporations, and private equity funds.

Private investment equity and corporate venture capital providing late-stage funding are crucial to the report’s predicted startup exit trends. The regional and U.S. stock exchanges are encouraged by the possibilities for tech startups.

Global Gate Venture anticipates that trade sales, M&As, and secondary sales by local and regional tech unicorns will be the main reason for startup exits, not mergers with foreign firms or China.

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