This week: Our greatest hits
MON, MAY 13, 2024

Today, we've got the deets on:

  • Garage’s top hits
  • The ones we loved the most

Dear Garage reader,

It’s been half a decade since the inception of Garage and for this final newsletter, we’ve decided to take a look at some of the team’s greatest hits over the years.

Who can forget how my colleagues Claudia and Sharanya broke the story of Flash Coffee’s shock winding up in Singapore or that it owed S$14 million to creditors?  

Also, do you recall the brouhaha around biotech startups as funding dried up, with the Garage team breaking the story of Biofourmis’ layoffs and ousting of its CEO? And let’s not leave out the closure of Temasek-backed Tessa Therapeutics, a story that spawned from an offhand comment from a contact.

We’ve also documented investor sentiment as startup funding started to slow down, what opportunistic investors were looking at, and how cautious investors were despite the taps flowing again.

Then there was our profile series 5 Questions, in which we interviewed titans of the startup ecosystem. Some had interesting back stories and some elusive ones.      

A memorable story that the founding reporters of Garage covered was the honestbee saga, which Sharanya has described as being a rollercoaster ride. The company’s odyssey was a crash course on what happens when a startup gets into trouble, finally runs out of money, and goes through liquidation

“I was surprised I even found myself writing not just restructuring stories but even a colourful piece on how honestbee had an art stash that included the iconic Lichtenstein painting Bedroom,” Sharanya said. 

Another story Claudia found memorable was the one on GIC and Temasek’s stakes in the startup ecosystem. The piece involved trawling through prospectuses, cross-checking financial filings and press releases, and tracing investments made through vaguely-named SPVs. 

“Most news publications hadn't realised that data on Temasek and GIC investments, traditionally so closely guarded, had been made public for the first time after several of their portfolio companies filed prospectuses during the tech IPO season,” she said. 

So here we are, at the end of the run for the Garage newsletter. It’s been our pleasure to provide you with the latest startup and tech news from Singapore and the region over these past five years.

To stay updated on the local and regional tech scene, sign up for Tech In Asia’s free daily newsletter, which will bring you the latest developments in bite-sized reads. You can also subscribe to Tech in Asia at 50 per cent off to get instant access to premium analyses, investigative pieces and data reports.

For BT subscribers, you can also access past issues of the Garage newsletter on our archive page.

Thank you again for being a part of our Garage journey and for your continuing support of The Business Times.

Benjamin Cher
BT Garage

READ MORE

1 / Staying neutral

SINGAPORE’S latest tech unicorn Silicon Box, which pushed past a US$1 billion valuation after a US$200 million funding this year, intends to steer clear of the geopolitical tug of war that has jolted the global semiconductor industry.

Read more

2 / Focusing on dry powder

THE number of funding deals has remained fairly constant between 2022 and 2023 in Singapore’s emerging tech ecosystem, but funding is concentrated on a few companies.

Read more

3 / Widening the pool

RIDE-HAILING app Gojek and ComfortDelGro Taxi will dispatch rides not taken up by drivers to each other’s platform.

Read more

4 / Going deeper

FOOD-DELIVERY platform foodpanda is making a fresh push into the online grocery space, with a new campaign for its house brand Bright kicking off on Monday.

Read more

5 / Court says no

THE Singapore High Court on Thursday (Apr 25) dismissed an application by Cake Group co-founder Chua U-Zyn to wind up the company, saying that the former chief technical officer “has gone too far” with the move.

Read more
Read more
Quote of the week

“I’m not going to have any one of them (state-linked funds) in my shareholder portfolio as an investor. I’m building the company to be geopolitically very free and neutral.”

 

Han Byung Joon, CEO of Silicon Box, on avoiding the quagmire of geopolitics.

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