Grab says ‘on track’ to close SPAC deal by year-end

Grab says ‘on track’ to close SPAC deal by year-end

The digital tech unicorn in April unveiled a plan to go public on Nasdaq through a merger with Altimeter Growth.

SINGAPORE: Singapore-based digital tech unicorn Grab is “on track” to go public by the end of this year, the company said today as it announced updates on the planned US listing, which had been pushed back from the original target of July.

Grab is one of the biggest startups in Southeast Asia, offering app-based services such as ride-hailing, food delivery and mobile payment. 

In April, it unveiled a plan to go public on Nasdaq through a merger with Altimeter Growth, a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC), at a valuation of nearly US$40 billion. 

Grab’s plan gives US investors exposure to fast-growing but underrepresented Southeast Asian economies.

In June, the SPAC merger was pushed back to the fourth quarter of 2021, as auditors looked into Grab’s financials for the past three years. 

That postponement came as the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) tightened scrutiny over SPACs.

“We remain on track to close our proposed business combination with Altimeter Growth Corp (AGC) by the end of this year,” Grab president Ming Maa said in a webcast for investors today.

Also in an SEC filing on the same day, the company noted that the business combination “is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2021, following the receipt of the required approval by AGC’s shareholders and the fulfillment of other customary closing conditions”.

Grab’s major shareholders include the SoftBank Vision Fund, Uber Technologies, China’s Didi Chuxing and Toyota Motor. 

Once the planned merger is complete, Grab will have six board directors including CEO Anthony Tan, the company said today, with four of them being independent directors. 

Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, who currently serves as a director, will continue to sit on the board.

Grab today also announced its earnings for the three months through March 2021. 

The net loss for the quarter was US$652 million, compared with a US$771 million loss in the year-ago period. 

Gross merchandise value (GMV) for the first quarter was US$3.6 billion, up 5% from a year earlier due to rising demand for food and grocery delivery services.

GMV for food and grocery deliveries increased 49% on the year, while that for its transport business declined 36% due to the pandemic-induced lockdowns across Southeast Asia.

The company did not disclose figures for the April-June quarter, but chief financial officer Peter Oey said in a statement that in “the second quarter, we saw the continuing resilience and strong performance of our business, combined with disciplined operational execution”.

Some Southeast Asian countries now face their worst coronavirus infection waves due to slow vaccination rollouts, with megacities such as Thailand’s Bangkok and Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City under lockdowns, which could affect Grab’s businesses.

According to today’s filing, Grab expects GMV of US$16.7 billion for full-year 2021, up about 35% from US$12.5 billion in 2020.

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