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Thiel-backed Bridgetown SPAC weighs up to US$10b Tokopedia deal

Published Wed, Dec 16, 2020 · 12:04 AM

[NEW YORK] Bridgetown Holdings, the blank-check company backed by billionaires Richard Li and Peter Thiel, is considering a potential merger with Indonesia's e-commerce giant PT Tokopedia, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The special purpose acquisition company is exploring the structure and feasibility of a deal with Tokopedia, one of the most valuable startups in the South-east Asian nation, the people said.

The SoftBank Group-backed firm could be valued at US$8 billion to US$10 billion in a transaction, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the discussions are private.

Deliberations are at a preliminary stage and Bridgetown could still look at other potential targets, the people said.

Hong Kong tycoon Li, whose investment firm Pacific Century Group also owns companies including insurer FWD Group, is already a minority investor in Tokopedia, the people said. Representatives for Bridgetown and Tokopedia declined to comment.

Bridgetown surged 30 per cent in premarket trading on Tuesday.

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Bridgetown raised US$550 million in a US initial public offering in October, following other so-called blank-check companies such as those associated with billionaire investor Bill Ackman and former US House Speaker Paul Ryan.

Merging with a SPAC has become an increasingly popular method for closely held businesses to raise capital for growth.

A potential merger with Tokopedia would also be in-line with the strategy that Bridgetown set out in its prospectus: to focus on a target in the technology, financial services or media sectors in South-east Asia.

Tokopedia became Indonesia's second most valuable startup, just behind ride-hailing and delivery giant Gojek, by scoring early backing from SoftBank and Alibaba Group. Alphabet's Google and Temasek Holdings invested about US$350 million in Tokopedia, people familiar with the matter have said.

E-commerce platforms including Tokopedia, Alibaba's Lazada Group and Shopee - a unit of Singapore-based Sea - have been some of the beneficiaries of coronavirus-driven lockdowns this year as they moved quickly to serve the millions of people forced to make their first online purchases while staying home.

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