Singapore startup Trax is raising funds at US$1.1 billion value

A colorful supermarket aisle with people shopping for groceries.
Trax’s image recognition technology is being used by global consumer packaged goods companies.(PHOTO: Getty Editorial)

By Yoolim Lee and Revathi Valluvar

(Bloomberg) -- Trax, a Singapore-based startup serving the retail industry, is finalizing a deal to raise $100 million at a pre-money valuation of about $1.1 billion, a price tag that could make it the second most valuable startup in the city-state.

The company is talking with a few private equity firms and the new funding round is expected to close by the end of June, Chief Executive Officer Joel Bar-El said in an interview ahead of a conference at Singapore Exchange Ltd. Monday. Trax raised $125 million last year in a round led by Chinese private equity firm Boyu Capital, and Singapore’s GIC Pte came on board as a shareholder later. Trax’s valuation should now rank only behind ride-hailing giant Grab’s among Singapore-based tech startups.

The new round is aimed at financing three acquisitions. Trax recently signed a deal to buy LenzTech Co., a Beijing computer vision technology service provider and direct competitor, for an undisclosed amount. It’s also in advanced negotiations to buy a European competitor and a U.S. company, Bar-El said.

The moves come as Trax is planning for an initial public offering in the next 18 to 24 months, he said. Trax has long planned for the listing on Nasdaq or the New York Stock Exchange. However, the company is now also in talks with SGX for a potential dual listing after the local exchange approached the company, he said.

“We are having a discussion with SGX for a potential dual listing,” he said. SGX has proposed doing a listing in Singapore first and then in New York, which Trax is reviewing. “New York, for sure, we are going eventually. Now we have grown to a substantial size, both in terms of revenues and the number of people, global spread, we feel that the company is ready for an IPO.”

In China, Trax will integrate LenzTech’s 110 employees, including 60 research and development staff, with its subsidiary there. Boyu Capital, Trax’s second-largest shareholder, was instrumental in helping the company negotiate many aspects of the deal, including the price, the CEO said.

Trax’s image recognition technology is used by global consumer packaged goods companies, including Coca-Cola Co. and Nestle SA, to track their products on retail shelves. The company now has 175 clients in 50 countries and counts private equity firm Warburg Pincus as its biggest shareholder.

Bar-El founded Trax in 2010 after a chance meeting in Singapore with acquaintance Dror Feldheim, now the company’s chief commercial officer. He said there are advantages to listing in Singapore, where the company has its headquarters along with two co-founders and other senior managers.

Bar-El said Uber Technologies Inc.’s lackluster stock market debut won’t dampen Trax’s IPO prospects. His company has the flexibility go public any time.

“As long as you have a good company that has a solid business model, blue chip clients and expanding business model, those companies will always be successful,” he said. “Trax has always burned very little cash and we provide solutions for a huge industry, the retail industry. We are not intimidated.”

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