Grab, which made its start as a taxi-booking app six years ago, has ventured into areas including payments and food delivery. Earlier this year, it bought Uber’s regional operations.
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“We have articulated our vision to be the everyday app of Southeast Asia, so we are interested in any tech that enables that vision in terms of becoming a complete O2O (online-to-offline) mobile platform,” Chris Yeo, head of Grab Ventures, told Reuters. He said it could look to develop businesses in-house or work with existing start-ups. Grab Ventures’ current portfolio includes self-driving technology firm Drive.ai and Indonesian payments service, Kudo. It will seek to partner 8-10 growth-stage start-ups over the next 24 months and may invest in a few.
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Grab Ventures will work with government agencies across the region to support such companies by helping them develop and scale technologies. It may also look for private-sector partners, Yeo said.
Its accelerator program, which will provide expertise, technical resources, and networks to the start-ups, includes partners from government agencies such as the Info-communications Media Development Authority of Singapore and Enterprise Singapore.
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