Amid ride-hailing boom, Careem's estimated valuation rises over $2b
The Middle-Eastern ride-hailing giant raised 200m in fresh funding
Middle East ride-hailing company Careem said on Thursday it had secured $200 million in fresh funding from existing investors and that it expects to raise more to finance expansion plans.
A source close to the deal told Reuters the latest investment gave the ride-hailing company an estimated valuation of over $2 billion. Careem was estimated to be worth around $1 billion as of December 2016.
Dubai-headquartered Careem, the main regional rival of Uber Technologies, said it expected to raise a total of over $500 million in its latest funding effort to expand into mass transportation, deliveries, and payments.
A ride from Karachi to an over billion-dollar valuation
Reuters reported in March that Careem was in early talks to raise as much as $500 million from investors.
“Internet-enabled services are having a profound and positive impact on our region, where the consumer internet opportunity is huge and untapped,” said Careem Co-Founder and Chief Executive Mudassir Sheikha in a statement.
Careem, founded in 2012, says it has 30 million registered users in over 120 cities in the Middle East, North Africa, Turkey, and Pakistan.
The $200 million came from existing investors which includes Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal’s Kingdom Holding, Al Tayyar Group, STV, and Japanese e-commerce company Rakuten.
Careem counts German carmaker Daimler and China’s largest ride-hailing company DiDi Chuxing as some of its other backers.
Careem has expanded into new markets this year such as Sudan and started trialing food delivery services after buying a restaurant listing and reservation online platform.
Careem adds delivery service to its fleet
Reuters reported in July Careem was planning to spend up to $150 million to launch its food delivery business following the acquisition of the RoundMenu restaurant platform.
Careem competes head-to-head in many major Middle East cities with San Francisco-headquartered Uber, which plans to go public next year and could be valued at $120 billion according to a Wall Street Journal report.
A source close to the deal told Reuters the latest investment gave the ride-hailing company an estimated valuation of over $2 billion. Careem was estimated to be worth around $1 billion as of December 2016.
Dubai-headquartered Careem, the main regional rival of Uber Technologies, said it expected to raise a total of over $500 million in its latest funding effort to expand into mass transportation, deliveries, and payments.
A ride from Karachi to an over billion-dollar valuation
Reuters reported in March that Careem was in early talks to raise as much as $500 million from investors.
“Internet-enabled services are having a profound and positive impact on our region, where the consumer internet opportunity is huge and untapped,” said Careem Co-Founder and Chief Executive Mudassir Sheikha in a statement.
Careem, founded in 2012, says it has 30 million registered users in over 120 cities in the Middle East, North Africa, Turkey, and Pakistan.
The $200 million came from existing investors which includes Saudi Arabian billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal’s Kingdom Holding, Al Tayyar Group, STV, and Japanese e-commerce company Rakuten.
Careem counts German carmaker Daimler and China’s largest ride-hailing company DiDi Chuxing as some of its other backers.
Careem has expanded into new markets this year such as Sudan and started trialing food delivery services after buying a restaurant listing and reservation online platform.
Careem adds delivery service to its fleet
Reuters reported in July Careem was planning to spend up to $150 million to launch its food delivery business following the acquisition of the RoundMenu restaurant platform.
Careem competes head-to-head in many major Middle East cities with San Francisco-headquartered Uber, which plans to go public next year and could be valued at $120 billion according to a Wall Street Journal report.