Khaleej Times

Pakistan startups hunt for angel funds

- Chris Kay and Faseeh Mangi Jehan Ara speaks with an employee at The Nest i/o’s incubator centre in Karachi.

karachi — After banks in Pakistan turned down loan applicatio­ns for his fledgling advertisin­g company seven years ago, Faraz Khan found plenty of private investors willing to back his vision — with a catch.

A lot of the cash was illicit and accepting it would have turned his Gizelle Communicat­ion Ltd into a money launderer.

“There were investors with blank checks and investors who were like ‘take as much money as you want,’” he said over coffee at the Movenpick Hotel in Karachi. “You have to sift through very carefully the ones that are dirty money.”

Khan instead turned to other businesses and an internatio­nal bank to build the company, which he is considerin­g listing on the Pakistan Stock Exchange this year in what would be a first for a startup in the country. Stung by the reluctance of banks, he’s taking on more of an angel investor role to get hundreds of other businesses off the ground across Pakistan as the 42-year-old seeks to replicate his success with Gizelle through his Seed Ventures incubator. It’s not an easy task. While larger neighbour India has long had a vibrant venture capital and startup scene, that’s not the case in Pakistan. It’s South Asia’s secondlarg­est economy and home to about 200 million, yet the country is looked at with caution by foreign investors given power shortages and security concerns. Most of the country’s commercial banks are risk averse, making money through investment­s in government notes and bonds and preferring loans to traditiona­l manufactur­ers and industries run by wellestabl­ished families.

With unemployme­nt remaining high, the country is struggling to create enough jobs for its young workforce. In an attempt to boost

a lot of kids have started thinking startups, which is a good thing. It’s a shift, it started three to four years ago when kids started taking work online Jehan Ara, founder of The Nest i/o

entreprene­urship, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif set up a loan programme for those under the age of 45 to set up businesses, providing interest-free loans to more than 260,000 people since his election in 2013.

Changing the status quo

Home grown organisati­ons like Seed Ventures and Planet N Pvt are attempting to change the status quo. Young Pakistanis that Khan meets at university roadshows are often resistant to becoming entreprene­urs.

They say “it’s risky, there’s a chance of failure, there’s a lack of access to finance and we’ve got great expectatio­ns from our parents to actually become doctors, engineers, lawyers and that is a safer option,” Khan said, whose firm, Seed Ventures, has invested 78 million rupees ($745,000), supporting 135 startups. “That’s the cultural mindset.”

According to Planet N, of the more than 700 startups that were establishe­d since 2010, 67 per cent are still active and 68 have managed to raise funding of about $20 million. At least 24 incubators, — Bloomberg accelerato­rs and co-working spaces supporting startups have popped up across the country in the past seven years.

Despite the growth of incubators and accelerato­rs, startups will continue to stumble without wider access to seed finance, said Nadeem Hussain, the founder of Planet N. While his firm has invested $8 million in 41 companies, most of them startups, he estimates that at least $1 billion of seed money is needed in Pakistan to help new businesses take the next step.

“They teach you, they mentor you, but when you come out there’s no capital,” said the 61-year-old Hussain, a financier who built Tameer Microfinan­ce Bank before selling it to Telenor last year. “Unless we can address that, people are going to turn away from entreprene­urship because of the high failure rate.”

Silicon Valley incubators

The old way of thinking is being challenged at centres that are popping up across Pakistan. The Nest i/o, which opened in Karachi about two-and-a-half years ago, looks just like the incubators found in Silicon Valley. In a high-rise with views across the city of 20 million, millennial­s hunch over laptops in a colorful open-plan office littered with foosball tables and beanbags.

Founder, Jehan Ara, took inspiratio­n from visits to incubation centres in Germany, the UK and the US. Gaining about $1.4 million in grants from Alphabet’s Google, Samsung Electronic­s and the US State Department, about 100 startups have come through the centre’s fourmonth cycle. About 85 per cent of those are continuing to survive.

Among the businesses that have been through The Nest are a provider of flat-pack homes for refugee camps and one that makes engraving machines that are a fraction of the price of imported ones, said Ara. Social Champ, a mobile app which simultaneo­usly posts on different social media platforms, caught the eye of venture capitalist Guy Kawasaki, who has invited the founder to Silicon Valley, she said.

“A lot of kids have started thinking startups, which is a good thing,” Ara, who calls herself the Nest’s “Big Bird,” said. “It’s a shift, it started three to four years ago when kids started taking work online.”

Google has just renewed Nest’s grant for another three years and is now looking to open an accelerato­r programme and enter the race with Seed Ventures and Planet N for Pakistan’s first unicorn, a startup with a value of more than $1 billion.

To get there, more will have to be done. — Bloomberg

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