Go-Jek, whose backers include Alphabet Inc's Google and China's
Tencent Holdings, has grown rapidly since launching eight years
ago in Indonesia, a country with a population of more than 250
million people.
The company already offers a wide range of app-based services
outside of ride-hailing, such as food delivery or movie tickets,
as it competes with the other main ride-hailing app operating in
Indonesia, Singapore-based Grab, which bought the Southeast
Asian business of Uber Technologies earlier this year.
Go-Jek said it had formed a strategic partnership with
Indonesian peer-to-peer lenders Findaya, Dana Cita and Aktivaku.
"We believe that a strong collaboration between financial
services providers and technology companies can reach a wider
range of people who have difficulty accessing financial
services, such as unbanked communities," Go-Jek president Andre
Soelistyo said in a statement.
P2P lending is an internet-based business where small-business
owners or individuals usually without access to bank credit can
seek loans - helping alleviate a financing shortfall estimated
at more than $73 billion in Indonesia.
The emergence of P2P lending platforms has so far been welcomed
by Indonesia's financial regulators which see them as offering a
much needed service to cash-strapped businesses and consumers at
a time when Indonesia's economy has been hobbled by sluggish
bank lending.
"This collaboration is very positive to increase financial
inclusion in Indonesia," said Hendrikus Passagi, who oversees
fintech for Indonesian regulator OJK.
Go-Jek founder Nadiem Makarim told Reuters in August that the
platform has 20 million to 25 million monthly users, for whom it
processes more than 100 million transactions.
Go-Jek's payment system, known as Go-Pay, has emerged as one of
the most popular mobile payment platforms in Indonesia and last
year Go-Jek acquired three smaller payment system fintech firms.
Go-Jek told Reuters the partnership with P2P lenders would be
separate from its Go-Pay payment vertical.
(Reporting by Fanny Potkin and Cindy Silviana; Editing by
Gopakumar Warrier)
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