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e-Conomy SEA Report 2021: Southeast Asia enters its “digital decade” as the internet economy is expected to reach US$1 trillion in Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) by 2030

Singapore, 10 November 2021 – Google, Temasek and Bain & Company released the sixth edition of the e-Conomy Southeast Asia (SEA) Report - Roaring 20’s: The SEA Digital Decade, today. Providing a ten-year outlook for the first time, the report highlights that the region is on the path to become a $1 trillion digital economy by 2030. Propelled by a fast-growing base of digital consumers and merchants, acceleration in e-commerce and food delivery, SEA is estimated to reach $174 billion in GMV by the end of 2021. This region’s digital economy is further expected to reach ~$360 billion by 2025, outgrowing the earlier projection of $300 billion.

The report states that SEA is entering its ‘digital decade’ as the internet increasingly becomes an integral part of consumers’ daily lives. The region now has more than 440 million internet users, and importantly, 350 million of them, or about 80%, are digital consumers, i.e. internet users who have bought at least one online service. Since the pandemic began, SEA has added 60 million new digital consumers, of which 20 million joined in the first half of 2021 alone. Catalysed by the pandemic, existing digital consumers ventured further into online services, and started buying services in four new verticals since the outbreak began. Existing users are also relying more on digital services and spending more across most verticals. This increased adoption of digital services is showing no signs of reversal, as 9 in 10 new users in 2020 continue to use them in 2021.

The report’s inaugural section on Southeast Asia’s small and medium enterprises, or digital merchants5, shows that these enterprises have turned to digital platforms to survive the pandemic. Digital financial services emerged as critical enablers, with over 90% digital merchants now accepting payments digitally. In the next five years, 8 in 10 of those merchants anticipate more than half of their supply purchases and sales will come from online sources.

The annual e-Conomy SEA Report sheds light on the internet economy in the region, covering Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. The report dives into trends across five leading sectors ‒ e-commerce, online media, transport & food, online travel and digital financial services and two nascent sectors - healthtech and edtech. The report also reviews the tech investment landscape across the region and reveals what investors are looking for in the current environment.

Here are some key insights from this year’s report:

  1. SEA’s tenacious growth is primarily driven by e-commerce and food delivery

    E-commerce is expected to propel the SEA internet economy forward in the next decade. In a strong lead-up to 2030, e-commerce GMV could exceed $120 billion by end 2021 (a near doubling from 2020) with the potential to reach $234 billion by 2025. The food delivery sector emerged as a bright spot, growing 33% y-o-y to reach $12 billion in GMV. It has now become the most penetrated digital service, with 71% of all internet users ordering meals online at least once.

    While online travel growth remains muted, it is likely to see a recovery in the medium-to long-term, driven by pent-up demand and vaccination progress. Online media witnessed a healthy 32% growth to $22 billion in 2021. In particular, the pandemic ushered in a new generation of gamers, bringing with them a willingness to spend.

    In 2021, all the countries covered in the report experienced strong, double-digit growth. Indonesia contributed 40% of the region's total GMV at $70 billion; while the Philippines led with an impressive 93% growth to become a $17 billion digital economy.

  2. A new wave of digital merchants, propelled by the pandemic

    1 in 3 digital merchants believe that they would not have survived the pandemic without going online. The research found that 60% use digital tools to enhance operational and back-office productivity, while 90% accept digital payments. Going forward, digital lending services are likely to grow due to an appetite for consumer financing options and supply chain financing. While digital merchants recognise the positive impact of online platforms such as job creation and business opportunities, long-term profitability remains a top concern.

  3. Digital financial services see promising growth across all products

    Since the pandemic began, digital financial services have seen healthy growth, specifically in the adoption of e-wallets and A2A (account-to-account), fuelled by both merchant adoption and consumer usage.

    By 2025, digital payments are forecasted to reach over $1.1 trillion in gross transaction value (GTV), up from a forecast of $707 billion in 2021. Digital lending could see a 50% increase in outstanding balance from $26 billion in 2020 to $39 billion in 2021, led by a rebound in lending appetite and growth in usage of buy-now-pay-later services.

  4. Funding resurgence and the race to Initial Public Offerings (IPOs)

    Investments in SEA’s internet economy are expected to reach an all-time high in 2021. Deal value came up to $11.5 billion in the first half of the year, surpassing the $11.6 billion for the entire 2020. Investors see SEA as a lucrative investment destination for the long-term, especially in sectors such as e-commerce and digital financial services, which continue to attract the majority of investments (more than 60% of deal value). Increased deal activity and larger valuations that led to bigger funding rounds have spurred the induction of 11 new consumer technology unicorns in 2021, bringing the total number to 23. More tech companies are exploring IPOs as viable pathways to raise capital or allow early investors to monetise their holdings, especially in view of strong valuations and novel listing approaches such as special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs).

  5. Healthtech and edtech continue to show promise

    Healthtech and edtech continue to be nascent sectors to watch. Healthtech is seeing strong investor interest as consumers are increasingly embracing convenience and accessibility. While edtech has shown healthy growth potential, many investors are taking a ‘wait and see’ stance, as scalability remains unclear.

  6. Drivers and enablers of a $1 trillion GMV internet economy
  • E-commerce and online grocery will form a significant part of the region’s digital GMV in 2030. Transport and food, as well as online media, could unlock the next wave of value and contribute as much as e-commerce does today if demand grows beyond the urban markets.
  • The internet economies of all six countries will continue to grow rapidly. e.g. Indonesia alone, by 2030, could potentially be 2x SEA’s GMV today, while Vietnam could grow 11x to become a $220 billion digital economy.
  • While talent continues to be an unresolved challenge, a set of emerging enablers that require multilateral solutions between consumers, merchants, platforms, and regulators, will drive the growth of SEA’s digital economy. These enablers include a commitment to sustainability, robust and business-friendly data regulation, data infrastructure to support larger and more frequent data flows, as well as an equitable system to protect gig workers and consumer interests while spurring innovation.

"The phenomenal growth we see in Southeast Asia reinforces our view that the region will define the future of global digital ecosystems. Google’s commitment is to shape a digital decade for everyone in Southeast Asia, playing our role in creating equitable and responsible growth for the region to achieve its potential of $1 trillion in GMV by 2030. We’ll continue to build for the future of the internet in this region, ensure equitable growth for all workers and businesses, and provide inclusive and safe access for online communities," said Stephanie Davis, Vice President, Google Southeast Asia.

“The pandemic has led to accelerated and enduring digital adoption in Southeast Asia, which has propelled its internet economy to new heights. Temasek looks forward to increasing our investments in the region’s digital champions, using our capital to catalyse solutions and growth that will enable these companies to take maximum advantage of the digital decade,” said Rohit Sipahimalani, Chief Investment Strategist; Head, South East Asia, Temasek.

“It is clear that Southeast Asia’s internet economy has rebuilt tremendous growth momentum. GMV has increased 49% year-on-year, as seismic consumer and ecosystem shifts accelerated by Covid, continue to drive a massive digital adoption spurt for everything from online shopping and food delivery to digital payments and digital lending,” said Florian Hoppe, Partner and Head of Digital Practice in Asia-Pacific, Bain & Company. “The region has generated tremendous investor interest over the past two years, and we believe the ‘roaring 20s’ will really put Southeast Asia’s internet economy on the global map, as it charts a unique growth path and reshapes all industry sectors in the region. Managing this growth sustainably in the interest of all stakeholders will be a key mission for all ecosystem participants."

Singapore’s digital economy continues to grow
The internet economy in Singapore has seen a rebound in 2021 and is expected to grow by 35% from $11 billion in 2020 to $15 billion, and with the potential to reach $27 billion in 2025. Two-thirds of GMV growth is led by e-commerce which grew 106% year-on-year. Overall, Singapore has the highest proportion of digital consumers out of all internet users at 97%, as compared to the region’s average of 80%. Its digital merchants are also more inclined to deepen usage of digital services.

Travel is showing early signs of recovery, with a 28% increase from $1.8 billion in 2020 to $2.3 billion in 2021, boosted by the gradual easing of restrictions such as Vaccinated Travel Lanes (VTLs). On the day Singapore announced VTLs with Germany and Brunei, search trends for Germany jumped 700%.

Investor interest also recovered as the region’s deal value reached $4.3 billion in the first half of 2021 due to the interest in SPACs and the government’s focus on making Singapore the listing destination of choice.

Commenting on Singapore’s digital economy, Stephanie Davis said, “The continued growth of the internet economy has given rise to a new set of opportunities in Southeast Asia. Singapore is well-positioned to be a role model for Southeast Asian countries in preparing its talent, SMEs and start-ups for the digital decade. We want to continue empowering Singaporeans today, for tomorrow by investing in digital skills to help people take on jobs of the future and support local businesses in capturing digital opportunities.”

Rohit Sipahimalani added, “As a gateway for funding and talent, and an attractive tech hub, Singapore will continue to play an integral role in driving growth in the region’s internet economy. Efforts by the public and private sectors to foster innovation, build infrastructure and develop talent, puts Singapore in good stead to nurture future tech champions.”

“Singapore’s internet economy demonstrates long-term resilience and has emerged stronger after a contraction in 2020. While we predict tremendous headroom for growth in the digital decade ahead, Singapore must lead and map the growth pathways as a leader in digital innovation for the region,” said Florian Hoppe. “We believe increasing penetration of digital financial services and corresponding infrastructure, continued investments in last mile logistics, coupled with the ubiquitous access to internet and structural shifts in consumer and SME behaviours will help uplift and sustain today’s thriving regional economies.”

For more information: Please contact Amanda Chong at 8200 5363 or amanda.chong@tateanzur.com / googleteam@tateanzur.com

About Google
Google's mission is to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful. Through products and platforms like Search, Maps, Gmail, Android, Google Play, Chrome and YouTube, Google plays a meaningful role in the daily lives of billions of people and has become one of the most widely-known companies in the world. Google is a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc.

About Temasek
Temasek is a global investment company with a net portfolio value of S$381 billion as at 31 March 2021. Headquartered in Singapore, it has 13 offices in 9 countries around the world. The Temasek Charter defines Temasek’s three roles as an Investor, Institution and Steward, which shape its ethos to do well, do right, and do good. As a provider of catalytic capital, it seeks to enable solutions to key global challenges. With sustainability at the core of all Temasek does, it actively seeks sustainable solutions to address present and future challenges, as it captures investible opportunities to bring about a sustainable future for all. For more information on Temasek, please visit www.temasek.com.sg.

About Bain & Company
Bain & Company is a global consultancy that helps the world’s most ambitious change makers define the future. Across 63 offices in 38 countries, we work alongside our clients as one team with a shared ambition to achieve extraordinary results, outperform the competition, and redefine industries. We complement our tailored, integrated expertise with a vibrant ecosystem of digital innovators to deliver better, faster, and more enduring outcomes. Our 10-year commitment to invest more than $1 billion in pro bono services brings our talent, expertise, and insight to organizations tackling today’s urgent challenges in education, racial equity, social justice, economic development, and the environment. We earned a gold rating from EcoVadis, the leading platform for environmental, social, and ethical performance ratings for global supply chains, putting us in the top 2% of all companies. Since our founding in 1973, we have measured our success by the success of our clients, and we proudly maintain the highest level of client advocacy in the industry.

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1 The “internet economy” encompasses 4 sectors (e-Commerce, Transport & food, Online travel, and Online media) in GMV calculations. It is used interchangeably with “digital economy”.
2 All GMV estimates are in US Dollars.
3 A “digital consumer” is defined as any internet user who has transacted in any vertical before or after the pandemic.
4 Since March 2020.
5 A “digital merchant” is a B2C-focused small business, usually in food services, consumer services, traditional retail or e-commerce retail. It has fewer than 100 employees, operates digital tools with a level of proficiency, and has had online sales in the past 12 months.

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