The Mexico City-based startup has raised over $400 million in
total funding since its founding four years ago, with Japan's
SoftBank, Hong Kong's DST Global and U.S.-based Greenoaks
Capital leading the recent round, Garcia said in an interview on
Wednesday.
The company is SoftBank's most recent Latin American investment
to become a unicorn - lingo for tech startups valued at more
than $1 billion - after delivery app Loggi and gym membership
app Gympass, both from Brazil, and Colombian delivery app Rappi.
Japanese tech investor Softbank last year vowed to deploy $5
billion in the region, which Mexican investors praised as a
potential game changer for young companies that struggle to
fundraise locally.
"It's really humbling for us to be the first Mexican unicorn.
It's something really important for the ecosystem in Latin
America, and especially Mexico," Garcia, 37, said.
Kavak, an online platform for buying and selling secondhand cars
with operations in Mexico and Argentina, is laying plans to
launch in Brazil early next year, Garcia said.
Kavak entered Argentina in August through its merger with
used-car platform Checkars.
After building the business gradually in Mexico, Garcia said he
aims to scale up faster in Brazil, Latin America's biggest
economy, with plans to hire 500 people within a year. Kavak
employs some 800 people in Mexico and Argentina, a workforce
that Garcia says will nearly double next year.
Despite the hit of the coronavirus crisis, Garcia said traffic
has recovered to pre-pandemic levels as shoppers become more
comfortable with e-commerce and seek alternatives to public
transportation.
He expects Kavak to turn a profit in the next couple of years,
and going public is in his sights, too.
"A route to do an IPO is in our plans... probably in the next
two to three years we'd think about doing that," he said.
(Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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