The Sun (Malaysia)

Grab expands finance business with consumer loans, wealth management

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SINGAPORE: Grab, Southeast Asia’s biggest ridehailin­g firm, deepened its finance sector push yesterday by announcing that it will offer consumer loan services in Singapore and roll out wealth management products in the fast-growing but crowded sector.

Backed by heavyweigh­t investors including SoftBank Group Corp, Grab has already sunk its roots into financial services, food delivery and mobile payments over the last few years, even before the coronaviru­s pandemic hurt its mainstay ridehailin­g business.

It raised about US$850 million (RM3.59 billion) in February from Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc and other investors for expanding its financial services and applied for an online Singapore banking licence together with Singapore Telecommun­ications Ltd.

“Consumer loans would be offered by our partner banks via a platform provided by us on the Grab app,” Reuben Lai, senior managing director at Grab’s financial business, told a news briefing.

Starting in Singapore later this year, before expanding to

Malaysia and other countries, Grab’s third-party consumer loans will typically be disbursed within two to four days after being approved, the company said.

Grab already offers working capital loans from its balance sheet to small and mediumsize­d enterprise­s in four countries.

Southeast Asia’s most valuable startup with an estimated valuation of US$14 billion announced a 5% reduction in staff numbers in June as it cut costs amid slower growth due to the pandemic.

The eight-year-old firm, which has access to e-money licences in six major economies of Southeast Asia, says its app has seen 187 million mobile downloads.

Grab, which acquired a robo-advisory startup in February, also said it will launch an investment service that allows users to invest small sums of money while spending on Grab’s various services. It has partnered with Singapore’s Fullerton Fund Management and UOB Asset Management to offer access to fixed income funds. – Reuters

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