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Serious GRAB - A Public Listed Company wef 2 Dec 2021

Same for my uncle just dial the lumber and pickup point always press 1 and very fast arrive paying extra booking fee $2.30 or even peak hours $3.30 and let uncle earn is better than letting these jibyes drivers and company earn.

Trick to pay grab uber or any gig ride trip charge...

If you see a grab car with no rider inside can stop him. Show him the Uber ride trip charge shown on Google Map app then say cash money OK?

To see how much uber trip charge is easy. Open Google drive App and look for the icon of a figure carry a bag. Click it and it will show the Uber trip charge. Simple, just point to the driver $20, if Uber trip price $20, you ok?
 
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Trick to pay grab, uber or any gig ride.

If you see a grab car with no rider inside can stop him. Show him the Uber ride trip charge shown on Google Map app then say cash money OK?

To see how much uber trip charge is easy. Open Google drive App and look for the icon of a figure carry a bag. Click it and it will show the Uber trip charge. Simple, just point to the driver $20, if Uber trip price $20, you ok?
should apply this trick on any public car instead of grab car !
 
Southeast Asia’s ride-hailing giant Grab fell sharply on its first day trading on the Nasdaq, after becoming the largest-ever company to close a SPAC merger and go public.

Shares opened the trading day at $13.06 apiece under ticker symbol “GRAB,” following a deal with Altimeter Growth Corp. that valued the four-time CNBC Disruptor 50 company at nearly $40 billion. But they lost more than a fifth of their value by Thursday’s closing bell, finishing more than 20% lower at $8.75 apiece.


Grab, ranked No. 16 on last year’s CNBC Disruptor 50 list, sells an array of digital services such as transportation, food delivery, hotel bookings, online banking, mobile payments and insurance services from its app — earning the “super app” title. It operates in most of Southeast Asia, serving more than 187 million users in over 465 cities across eight countries. Still, revenue at the company was down 9% year-over-year as net losses expanded to $988 million, up from $621 million.

More at https://shrtcô.de/4rWg3p
 
That's because the market is nervous about interest rate hike. Currently, they borrow at slmost zero percent and dump all that money in stocks and other investment,
 
The founders already made their money. Now with the extra cash, they can look at building rockets and internet satellites like the rest,
 
The revenue model for ride sharing tech start ups is inherently problematic. Grab should have diversified into other businesses before listing
 
They need to market their product better.

grab.jpg
 
The founders already made their money. Now with the extra cash, they can look at building rockets and internet satellites like the rest,

Mr Tan, whose great-grandfather was a taxi driver, was inspired to start Grab while working on his Master of Business Administration at Harvard Business School more than a decade ago. He gave up his family's business, one of the biggest auto distributors in Malaysia, and instead started a taxi-hailing service then known as MyTeksi with his Harvard classmate, Ms Tan Hooi Ling.

The project was later relocated to Singapore after raising money for a regional expansion and was rebranded as Grab in 2016. The company now also does food delivery, online payments and financial services.

Due to Grab's share-class structure, Mr Tan has 60.4 per cent voting rights even though he owns just 2.2 per cent of the company. If he fully exercises his stock options, his voting rights will increase to 66.11 per cent, according to a recent filing.

Even with today's slide, the deal has created considerable wealth for other key executives of the Singapore company. The holdings of Ms Tan, the co-founder, are now worth US$224 million, while president Ming Maa's are worth US$126 million.
 
It is better for Grab to fail.. An unethical company that use other people money recklessly while sucking the sweat and blood of its own workers..
 

Grab shares sink in historic Nasdaq debut as president touts the cross-selling opportunities of its super app strategy​

The largest-ever listing for a Southeast Asian company caps a rapid ascent for the startup founded less than a decade ago.​

BY
YVONNE LAU
December 02, 2021 11:03 AM EST


Subscribe to Fortune Daily to get essential business stories straight to your inbox each morning.
After an initial jump on Thursday, shares of Grab slumped more than 20% in their Nasdaq trading debut after the ride-hailing and delivery app merged with U.S. blank-check firm Altimeter Growth Corp in a special purpose acquisition company—or SPAC—deal valued at $40 billion, the largest ever. The $4.5 billion Grab raised in the deal makes it the largest IPO by a Southeast Asian company in U.S. history.

The listing caps a rapid ascent for the startup that entrepreneurs Anthony Tan and Tan Hooi Ling launched as MyTeksi in Malaysia less than a decade ago. The pair, who are unrelated, founded the company with $25,000 that included prize money they’d won by entering their ride-hailing idea in Harvard Business School’s New Venture Competition in 2011.

Nine years and $12 billion in investments later, Singapore-based Grab now operates in nearly 470 cities across eight Southeast Asian markets, employs 700,000 drivers, and offers food delivery, payments and financial services—in addition to ride-hailing—to 187 million users.
 
will probably end up like Razer down the road and be taken private by founders at a discount.

unless they get smart and hire an Indian CEO. :laugh::roflmao::roflmao:
name must be short yet with a modicum of mogul cum sanskrit. such as sunny balwani.
 
GRAB founder Anthony Tan was briefly a billionaire when Grab debuted on the Nasdaq with an opening price of US$13.06.

Anthony Tan's stake was worth about US$1.1 billion while co-founder Tan Hooi Ling's stake was worth US$333.7 million.

But their fortunes quickly reversed as the share price plunged 20.5 per cent to close at US$8.75 on Thursday (Dec 2). The slide wiped out about US$17 billion of Grab's market value, with Grab's market cap now sitting at US$34.5 billion.

This resulted in Anthony Tan's stake losing US$275 million to total US$725.4 million while Tan Hooi Ling's stake shrunk US$110.1 million to US$223.6 million.

Despite owing just 3.3 per cent of Grab's total shares, Anthony Tan has 60.4 per cent of the voting power due to Tan Hooi Ling's shares and Grab president Ming Maa's shares being held by trusts that appoints Anthony Tan the voting rights.

Grab's share performance has mirrored its other ride hailing peers on the Nasdaq, with Uber and Lyft seeing their share prices tank on the first day of trading. It is also similarly tracking its SPAC peers' performance, with most being negative post-mergers.
 
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-59486675


Ride hailing app Grab falls in $40bn market debut​

By Mariko Oi
Asia business correspondent, BBC News

Published2 days ago


1638672885001.png



Grab - the Uber of South East Asia - has made its stock market debut on New York's Nasdaq trading platform.
Shares initially rose in the Singapore-based operator of the ride-hailing and payments app, before falling sharply.
The share sale valued Grab at more than $40bn (£30bn), making it the largest ever US listing by a South East Asian firm.
Instead of a conventional share sale, Grab went public using a shell company designed to make the process cheaper.
Using a special purpose acquisition company (Spac) has become an increasingly popular strategy with start-ups, as it offers more flexibility around voting rights, as well as lower costs.
Minutes into their market debut, the shares rose by 21%, but ended the day more than 20% below their launch value.

Grab's business is growing, but the firm is yet to make a profit and it doesn't expect to do so until 2023.

However, Grab chief executive Anthony Tan told the BBC the firm's profit margins were "industry leading" and that he was focused on growing the business in a cost-disciplined way.

"You look at our food delivery business, a majority of our markets have already broken even, so we know how to get there as a clear path of profitability," he said.


1638672958844.png

Grab co-founder Anthony Tan has pushed his ride-hailing firm into new areas such as insurance

To address criticism that it is avoiding public scrutiny over its financial performance by choosing a Spac listing, Grab has reported its earnings for the last three quarters even though it didn't need to.
"Grab needs to demonstrate to investors its growth potential," said Professor Howard Yu of IMD Business school. "This is why Grab is trying hard to enter finance because that is one sector really high in terms of profitability."
Grab's existing investors include Japan's Softbank, China's Didi and Uber.

The flotation is being seen as a test for South East Asian financial technology and could encourage other start-ups in the region - like Grab's Indonesian rival Gojek which merged with Tokopedia - to follow suit.

What is Grab?​

Less than a decade ago, Grab was a simple taxi company, founded by Anthony Tan and Tan Hooi Ling in Malaysia.
Now it is one of the most popular apps in Asia, offering rides, food delivery and now, financial services, including loans, insurance, payments and investments - all accessed through a mobile phone app.

In 2018, it pushed Uber out of South East Asia and operates in 465 cities across eight countries.
Grab has become a "powerful flywheel combining ride-hailing, delivery and payments" that has "demonstrated durable growth even during the pandemic and is playing a foundational role in the digitisation of South East Asia", said Brad Gerstner, the chief executive of its Spac partner Altimeter.

What are Spacs?​

Spacs, which became a major story in the US stock market at the start of this year, are shell companies that are set up with the sole purpose of merging with a private firm to take it public. They are also known as "blank cheque companies".

For start-ups like Grab, it is a quicker and cheaper way to list on a stock market, with fewer regulatory hurdles.
A conventional initial public offering (IPO) costs about $1m, according to Michael Lints, partner at Golden Gate Ventures. But with a Spac, a company can go public for as little as half that amount.
"From a start-up's perspective, Spac is an extreme arrangement because it is even more founder-friendly than a traditional IPO," said Professor Yu. "Even after the company is listed, the voting rights can be geared to favour the founder and they remain in absolute control."

Grab is a case in point: Mr Tan has secured 60.4% of the voting rights even though he owns just 2.2% of the company's ordinary shares. This arrangement could have come under scrutiny if Grab had listed in the conventional way.
For investors though, Spacs can be more risky and they have not been a mainstream investment instrument until fairly recently.
"They were viewed as a shady way of getting a company listed," said Mr Lints. However, when brand name companies like DraftKings, a fantasy sports and betting operator, chose to go public with a Spac in 2019, the market took notice.

Why have Spacs taken off?​

Thanks to the Covid-19 pandemic, trillions of dollars of economic stimulus have been poured into the global economy, flooding the market with cheap money and investors looking for new opportunities.
After a record number of Spac listings in the first three months of this year, however, the US stock market regulator - the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) - issued guidance on Spacs. Its new accounting rules have resulted in the number of Spac IPOs falling sharply.
"Investors started to realise that some of them weren't even generating revenues," said Mr Lints, adding that there are signs people remain more cautious about Spacs.
But as the regulatory filing backlog clears, Spacs are making a comeback. Spac mergers of WeWork, social networking app Nextdoor and Grab have all been approved in the last few months.
The explosive growth of Spacs in the US is also spreading to the rest of the world, with the stock exchanges in London and Singapore allowing them and Hong Kong considering it.

"With a lot of appetite to invest, other countries are trying to relax regulations to encourage Spac listings so that they can bring these high-flying tech companies to list in their local markets," said Prof Yu. "It's almost like a race to the bottom, just like the taxation regime."
 
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