Go-Jek’s services feature is a serious advantage and one place where the company stands apart from the competition

Gojek.9-fin

Of course they did.

In the same week Didi Chuxing acquired Uber China, and subsequently turned around and invested US$600 million into Grab (with help from Softbank), Jon Russell from Techcrunch is reporting Indonesia’s Go-Jek has raised US$550 million of fresh funding to take on Uber and Grab in the region.

The deal would value the company at US$1.3 billion.

Also Read: Uber has lost once, and we’ll make them lose again: Grab CEO tells in a leaked email to staff, post Uber-Didi merger

The article cites a source familiar with the deal and claims the money is to be used for the services business and not international expansion.

Services make sense as a destination for invest because, as compared with regional rivals, Grab and Uber, Go-Jek has been the most successful in building a one-stop-shop multi-service platform in which — among others — its food delivery, package logistics, movie ticketing and cleaning services are all popular.

Regionally, Uber and Grab have not gained a similar traction outside of their core taxi and ride-sharing services.

The ride-sharing industry has made one incredible announcement after another this week as the Didi-Uber merger in China seems to be having a ripple effect across the region. Furthermore, as Grab and Didi have a significant financial tie-up, Go-jek suddenly finds itself staring across the proverbial boxing ring at considerably well-financed competitors.

Also Read: Uber China to merge with Didi in US$35B deal: Bloomberg

e27 has reached out to Go-jek for a response and will update as the story develops further.

 

 

The post Go-Jek joins the fray, set to raise US$550M in Asia’s ride-hailing war: TechCrunch appeared first on e27.