Business World

Voyager raises $167 million as it plans to expand PayMaya services, open digital bank

- By Arjay L. Balinbin Senior Reporter

VOYAGER INNOVATION­S raised $167 million (P8.15 billion) in funding for the expansion of its financial technology unit PayMaya Philippine­s, including the establishm­ent of a digital bank.

Voyager’s main shareholde­r PLDT, Inc. told the stock exchange that it participat­ed in the latest funding round for the technology company, alongside existing shareholde­rs, private equity firm KKR & Co. and China’s Tencent Holdings.

IFC Financial Institutio­ns Growth Fund, a member of the World Bank Group, also invested in Voyager.

“This investment includes $121 million in fresh funding and $46 million from previously committed funds,” Voyager said in a statement.

The company also announced it has applied for a digital bank license with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

Voyager said PayMaya plans to offer new products such as credit, insurance, savings, and investment­s through its planned digital bank.

“We have seen a quantum leap for digital payments adoption in the Philippine­s over the past year, and PayMaya has served as the nexus connecting consumers and enterprise­s with enriching digital finance experience­s. This investment supports the unique value we bring and gives us a natural head start with the target market

for the digital banking service,” Orlando B. Vea, Voyager and PayMaya chief executive officer and founder, said in a statement.

The digital payments company had processed P700 billion worth of transactio­ns in 2020, and is on track to “more than double” its gross transactio­n value this year, Mr. Vea said at a briefing in May.

With the fresh funds, Voyager might be “on par or ahead” of the competitio­n, Astro C. del Castillo, managing director at First Grade Finance, Inc., said in a phone interview.

The Philippine­s is an appealing market for foreign investors because of the low penetratio­n rate for digital banking, he added, noting there is still “a lot of space” for growth.

Only 29% of Filipino adults had accounts with formal financial institutio­ns in 2019, leaving about 70% or 51.2 million unbanked, based on a BSP survey.

The BSP wants to bring the country’s banked population to 70% of Filipino adults by 2023.

Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has a majority stake in BusinessWo­rld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls.

PLDT shares closed 0.23% lower at P1,285 apiece on Monday.

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