Singapore Aims to Become Southeast Asia's Silicon Valley
Venture-Capital Investments in Tech Outstrip Many Asian Neighbors
Updated Feb. 26, 2014 7:52 a.m. ET
SINGAPORE—Singapore is pulling out all the
stops to build its own version of Silicon Valley as it attempts to
create a startup hub for Southeast Asia.
Excited by deals such as
Facebook Inc.
FB -0.84%
's $19 billion agreement last week to buy messaging company
WhatsApp Inc., Singapore's policy makers and technology entrepreneurs
are betting that one day a tech giant could swoop down to grab one of
its own homegrown startups. Venture-capital tech investments in
Singapore last year outstripped those in Japan, South Korea and Hong
Kong.
Interactive: Singaporean Apps
Some homegrown products that have drawn interest from overseas investors
The city state, with its population
of just 5.4 million, isn't quite Silicon Valley. Singapore has yet to
produce anything like a
Google
GOOG +0.01%
or Facebook, much less a service like China's messaging app
Wechat, with 272 million monthly active users. It has had mixed success
in trying to kick start innovation in various industries including
biotechnology, media and entertainment.
Still,
investors say the technology ecosystem here is becoming more active.
One concern is that insufficient entrepreneurial spirit among young
Singaporeans and the government's financial largesse could inadvertently
enable some startups to limp along on state funds, some analysts say.
In
recent years, the Singapore government has been trying to fund local
technological innovation by investing some $100 million Singapore
dollars (US$79 million) for early-stage startups as part of the S$16
billion it has pledged for scientific research and development.
Well-known U.S. venture capital firms such as Andreessen Horowitz have
funded local startups, including video site Viki, which Japanese online
retailer
Rakuten Inc.
4755.TO -5.06%
bought for $200 million in September. Rakuten also agreed earlier
this month to acquire Cyprus-based messaging app Viber Media Inc.
Another
Singaporean tech firm attracting investors is RedMart, an online
grocery-delivery service founded in 2011 that has raised over $10
million from investors including Facebook co-founder and Singapore
resident
Eduardo Saverin.
One hotspot in Singapore's fledgling
startup scene is a seven-story, renovated factory building known as
Block 71, west of downtown. On a recent Friday evening, a few dozen
technology entrepreneurs gathered to drink beer, nibble on cheese and
almonds, and discuss their startups.
Hugh
Mason, a 47-year-old British entrepreneur, says there are about 100
startups and more than $1 billion of investment under management in the
building.
In 2010, Mr. Mason and his
friend, 38-year-old Singapore native and anti-spam pioneer Meng Weng
Wong, co-founded Singapore's Joyful Frog Digital Incubator, which hosts
frequent gatherings at its headquarters in Block 71.
Mr.
Wong, decked out in a three-piece suit and carrying the company's green
stuffed frog mascot Smoochy on his shoulder, moved about the room,
introducing out-of-town visitors to regular attendees. A sign read,
"Silicon Valley isn't a place. It's an idea."
Venture
capital invested in Singaporean tech firms by funds last year totaled
$1.71 billion. While that is behind China's $3.46 billion, it is ahead
of Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong, according to data from Hong
Kong-based Asian Venture Capital Journal. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP and
the National Venture Capital Association put venture funding for
software companies alone in the U.S. at $11 billion last year. Still,
funding devoted to Singapore's tech firms, including from the
government, skyrocketed last year to account for 19% of funding for
Asia—up from just $27.9 million, or 0.3%, in 2011.
Brad
Templeton, a Silicon Valley-based Internet pioneer who consults with
Google Inc. on self-driving cars, said while Singapore's tech scene
seems more active now than it was in previous years, he noted "too much
government can hurt a startup community rather than help it."
Google's Singapore office July 8, 2013.
Reuters
In its policies, Singapore's
government has attempted to mimic Israel, which has developed a robust
technology industry over the years. One government program designed to
assist early stage startups is the "Technology Incubation Scheme," which
began in 2010. Under that program, the government co-invests up to 85%
of capital in select startups, capped at the equivalent of S$500,000.
Technology incubators—organizations typically run by startup veterans
that provide mentoring and physical space—pitch in the remaining 15% and
are allowed to buy out the government's stake after three years. There
are now 15 incubators and more than 100 startups participating in the
program.
"In the past, I might have
funded two or three startups a year. Now I've been doing one a month,"
said Leslie Loh, who heads Singaporean venture capital firm Red Dot
Ventures, which launched in 2011.
Douglas
Abrams, who spent 14 years at JPMorgan in New York and has worked in
Singapore's technology venture-capital industry since 2000, said there
has been a marked increase in the value of Singaporean "exits"—when
startups are acquired or sell stock to the public. Mr. Abrams, now chief
executive of technology venture capital firm Expara, noted that last
year, some 20 firms had exits totaling more than S$400 million, compared
to about S$50 million in previous years.
Razmig
Hovaghimian, a 38-year-old American who started Viki as a class project
at Stanford Business School, said he chose Singapore for its
headquarters in part due to its proximity to key Asian markets. Though
Viki was able to attract Series A funding from Andreessen Horowitz, the
company benefited from Singapore's sense of community, Mr. Hovaghimian
said.
Steve Leonard, executive deputy
chairman of Singapore's Infocomm Development Authority, which is tasked
with building the country's technology industry, noted that Singapore
offers good infrastructure, rule of law, and easy access to major
markets.
"We're still waiting for that
Instagram or that WhatsApp," said
Scott Anthony,
a Singapore-based managing partner at consulting firm Innosight.
"It's going to be a few more years, but I think it's coming."
Write to Newley Purnell at newley.purnell @wsj.com
Corrections & Amplifications
Venture funding for Singapore's technology sector soared to $1.71 billion last year from $27.9 million in 2011. An earlier version of this article and an accompanying chart incorrectly said it was $27.3 million in 2011.
Venture funding for Singapore's technology sector soared to $1.71 billion last year from $27.9 million in 2011. An earlier version of this article and an accompanying chart incorrectly said it was $27.3 million in 2011.
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