The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Trade tensions not affecting investment­s in Singapore’s startups

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VENTURE capital investors are flocking to Singapore despite uncertaint­y around Us-china trade relations, even as businesses hold back spending, according to Peter Ong, chairman of Enterprise Singapore.

Protracted trade tensions have not affected investor willingnes­s to pump billions of dollars into young companies because their investment horizon goes beyond the current environmen­t, Ong said in an interview on the sidelines of the city-state’s annual fintech festival. Funding for Singapore startups grew to Us$9.7bil (Rm40.29bil) in the first nine months of 2019, a 28% jump from the total amount raised in all of 2018, according to Enterprise Singapore.

Venture capital has burgeoned in recent years in Singapore, where there are more than 150 funds, 100 incubators and accelerato­rs and 4,000 technology startups. Singapore joins other financial centres in promoting technology to boost competitiv­eness and innovation, with the central bank considerin­g extending funding for financial-technology initiative­s.

The trade war “has not dampened venture capital funding because when you invest, you are really not looking at the company’s condition today,” Ong said. “You are looking at three to five years down the line, and who knows how the environmen­t will change.”

A government agency, Enterprise Singapore provides financial and non-financial assistance to the country’s startups and small and mid-sized enterprise­s to help spur innovation and internatio­nalisation. Notable among its successes are Old Chang Kee Ltd, which makes curry puffs, and Udders Pte Ltd, which makes ice cream with an Asian touch.

Ong said the standoff between the world’s two largest economies has mostly affected Singapore’s trade and manufactur­ing sectors, and generally has led to “a period of uncertaint­y.” Singapore’s economy, which is heavily linked to global supply chains, narrowly avoided a technical recession in the third quarter.

Though the impact on startups has been minimal, “businesses, consumers, government­s, prefer to plan under certainty,” Ong said.

Similarly, another hot-button issue – Brexit – is not a major concern for young companies because it takes them on average five years before they can consider going public, according to Ong.

“The wonderful thing about when you do a startup is that you’re not worried about the current economic climate,” Ong said.

Last Wednesday, Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat announced that Singapore has entered a partnershi­p with a Uk-based accelerato­r to help small-and mid-sized companies and upstarts enter London and vice versa, an initiative supported by Enterprise Singapore.

The agency also is working on other initiative­s to build Singapore’s startup ecosystem: It has partnered with the Infocomm Media Developmen­t Authority (IMDA), the telecommun­ications and media regulator, to launch an “open innovation network” linking businesses, government­s and associatio­ns with startups. The two agencies will also work to scale IMDA’S open innovation platform regionally.

GOV-PACT allows the government to work with small and medium-sized enterprise­s and startups to develop, test and validate new innovation.

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