HEADLINES

Six M’sian companies in Forbes Asia’s The 100 to Watch list

They are Aerodyne, BoomGrow, Care Concierge, Involve Asia, Lapasar, and PolicyStreet

11:32 AM MYT

 

SINGAPORE – Six Malaysian companies have made it into Forbes Asia’s third annual edition of the 100 to Watch list, which spotlights small companies and startups on the rise across the Asia Pacific region.

They are Aerodyne, BoomGrow, Care Concierge, Involve Asia, Lapasar, and PolicyStreet.

The 100 to Watch list, which can be found at www.forbes.com/100toWatch and in the September issue of Forbes Asia, is sponsored by FedEx.

“Companies on this year’s Forbes Asia’s 100 to Watch list are a study in resilience. With rising interest rates, funding is harder to come by for startups.

“The companies on this year’s list, therefore, represent those with strong prospects to become success stories,” said Forbes Asia editor Justin Doebele in a statement today.

According to Forbes Asia, a drought in global venture capital activity has not deterred startups across Asia from breaking new ground.

This year’s list spotlights small companies and startups that are targeting underserved markets or applying new technologies, from generative AI to blood-based cancer diagnostics.

These include eco-friendly innovations, such as the development of insect-based alternative proteins and digitisation of milk production to improve yields.

Others include social commerce providers, which help users sell consumer products.

Thirteen countries and territories are represented across 11 categories, including biotechnology and healthcare, e-commerce and retail, and finance.

Leading the list for the second year in a row, Singapore contributed 20 companies to the list, followed by Hong Kong with 15 and mainland China with 11.

The emerging innovation hubs of Indonesia and the Philippines contributed 11 and nine companies, respectively.

For the selection of the 100 to Watch list, Forbes Asia solicited online submissions and invited accelerators, incubators, SME advocacy organisations, universities, venture capitalists and others to nominate companies as well.

The final 100 were selected from over 550 submissions.

To qualify for consideration, companies had to be headquartered in the Asia Pacific region, privately owned, for profit, have no more than US$50 million in its latest annual revenue and have no more than US$100 million in total funding through August 7.

Forbes Asia editors evaluated each submission, looking at metrics such as a positive impact on the region or industry, a track record of strong revenue growth or ability to attract funding, promising business models or markets, and a persuasive story. – August 29, 2023

Topics

 

Popular

Cleared for layoffs? AirAsia to retrench 20% of workforce in major cost-cutting move

This allegedly involves cabin services, cargo and logistics, engineering and maintenance, as well as the commercial division, according to Scoop’s source

Duck and cover? FashionValet bought Vivy’s 30 Maple for RM95 mil in 2018

Purchase of Duck's holding company which appears to be owned wholly by Datin Vivy Yusof and husband Datuk Fadzarudin Shah Anuar was made same year GLICs invested RM47 mil

Mutiara LRT project kicks off as Penang’s six-year construction timeline begins

SRS Consortium receives notice to proceed with first civil works; RM13 billion project slated for completion by 2031

Related