E-commerce

Singapore Unicorn Ninja Van Steps Up Investments In Automation Amid E-Commerce Boom – Forbes

Summary

“We’re seeing e-commerce growing exponentially.”

Lai Chang Wen, cofounder and CEO of Ninja Van Group.

Singapore-based logistics unicorn Ninja Van—which counts European parcel delivery firm Geopost/DPDgroup as its biggest shareholder—is boosting investments in automation amid surging e-commerce volumes across Southeast Asia.

E-commerce revenues across Southeast Asia, jumped 48% to $55 billion in 2020, compared to the year before, and is expected to exceed…….

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“We’re seeing e-commerce growing exponentially.”

Lai Chang Wen, cofounder and CEO of Ninja Van Group.


Singapore-based logistics unicorn Ninja Van—which counts European parcel delivery firm Geopost/DPDgroup as its biggest shareholder—is boosting investments in automation amid surging e-commerce volumes across Southeast Asia.

E-commerce revenues across Southeast Asia, jumped 48% to $55 billion in 2020, compared to the year before, and is expected to exceed $100 billion by 2025, Statistica.com said in a report in July. The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the growth of e-commerce as consumers stuck at home after governments enforced lockdowns to curb the spread of the virus turn to online shopping and food deliveries.

Bolstered by the e-commerce boom, the Ninja Van’s revenue has been growing at 40% to 50% annually, the company’s cofounder and CEO Lai Chang Wen, said in a recent interview with Forbes Asia. “We’re seeing e-commerce growing exponentially,” he added.

To cope with the surging volumes and speed up deliveries, Ninja Van recently opened an 80,000-square-foot (7,432-square-meter) automated parcel sorting hub—its biggest facility—in Singapore. With this new facility, the company said it can handle as many as 200,000 parcels per day, double its current capacity in the city-state.

Ninja Van uses automated parcel sorting conveyor belts at one of its warehouses in Singapore.

Courtesy of Ninja Van

“We’re starting to invest more heavily into long-term automation,” Lai said. “That’s going to be necessary as the whole region moves much higher e-commerce volumes.”

The company has even bigger plans across Southeast Asia. In the Philippines, its currently constructing an automated sorting facility that will be four times larger than its newly opened state-of-the-art hub in Singapore, Lai said.

While the growth of e-commerce volumes in the Philippine have slowed due to the economic impact of the lingering Covid-19 pandemic, Lai believes there are huge opportunities in the country. “We’re optimistic that the (Philippine) market is primed for growth.”

Ninja Van has sufficient cash to bankroll its expansion plans following its recent fundraising round. In September, the company raised $578 million from first-time investor Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group and existing investors Geopost/DPDgroup, billionaire Eduardo Saverin-backed B Capital Group, Monk’s Hill Ventures and Brunei’s sovereign wealth fund Zamru.

Following the latest funding round, Ninja Van joined the growing list of unicorns across Southeast Asia. The startup is now valued at $2.2 billion, according to estimates by Venture Cap Insights.

Chang Wen stands next to a Ninja Van delivery van.

Sean Lee for Forbes Asia

With the fresh capital, the company is not in a hurry to launch an initial public offering. “We are …….

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/jonathanburgos/2021/11/08/singapore-unicorn-ninja-van-steps-up-investments-in-automation-amid-e-commerce-boom/

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