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Two startups bag $100 million deals, as Aussie ecosystem hits a new level of maturity

Two very different Aussie startups have bagged $100 million apiece in the space of a week, as nine-figure investments become more common.
Stephanie Palmer-Derrien
Stephanie Palmer-Derrien
SiteMinder chief executive Sankar Narayan. Source: supplied.

Two very different Aussie startups have bagged $100 million apiece in the space of just a week, as more Aussie businesses rake in nine-figure investments.

And according to Right Click Capital partner Benjamin Chong, there are likely more massive raises on the way, marking a maturing of the startup ecosystem.

Mable, a profit-for-purpose business connecting small aged care and disability care providers with individuals theyโ€™re well suited to support, raised $100 million in equity funding from global investor General Atlantic.

The raise follows a period of โ€œstrong growthโ€, founder and chief executive Peter Scutt said in a statement. Thatโ€™s despite operating in a sector facing significant challenges, including workforce shortages and a lack of funding, not to mention the COVID-19 pandemic.

โ€œNew thinking is needed to solve the challenges facing the aged care and disability support sectors,โ€ Scutt said.

โ€œFacilitating the entry of small business providers, including sole traders, is a win-win for people seeking flexible, high quality and affordable support โ€” as well as an opportunity for small businesses to engage in one of the fastest growing sectors of the Australian economy.โ€

Elsewhere, hotel booking startup SiteMinder has secured $100 million from Fidelity International, as well as existing investors, as it gears up to an IPO.

Again, the investment follows a period of success for a startup operating in one of the sectors most badly hit by COVID-19.

For the 2021 financial year, the business sustained revenues of more than $100 million, representing a decline of 6%. However, it also saw a 40% increase in the number of customers using its payments and other transaction-based products.

In a statement, SiteMinder chief executive Sankar Narayan noted that the business has maintained โ€œhigh levels of engagement with customers and partners to deliver consistently strong business performance and demonstrate SiteMinderโ€™s resilience during these difficult industry conditionsโ€.

The investment puts the business in a strong position to benefit from an inevitable recovery in travel, he added.

โ€œWe thank all of our shareholders for their ongoing trust as we continue to perform against an evolving industry backdrop.โ€

The investment keeps SiteMinderโ€™s valuation upwards of $1 billion, as it maintains its status as an Aussie unicorn.

A nine-figure norm for startups?

So whatโ€™s going on here? Just a year or 18 months ago, a $100 million raise would have dominated the business news. Now, stories are almost getting lost among even bigger raises โ€” see Scalapayโ€™s $210 million cash injection โ€” and mammoth acquisition deals.

Are nine-figure deals really becoming the norm?

Speaking to SmartCompany, Right Click Capitalโ€™s Benjamin Chong says he wouldnโ€™t be surprised if we see more and more of these big-ticket deals coming through the pipeline.

He anticipates seeing more high-value acquisitions, too.

Chong puts the shift down to โ€œa confluence of factorsโ€.

Benjamin-Chong-startup-funding
Right Click Capital partner Benjamin Chong.

First, weโ€™re seeing Aussie business start to grow up. The startups that were founded five or ten years ago โ€” which have previously taken on smaller chunks of capital โ€” have used that capital wisely and succeeded both at home and overseas.

Second, low interest rates mean weโ€™re seeing more money going into venture capital and private equity markets, on a global scale.

โ€œIn respect of inflation, if you arenโ€™t in growth assets, then the real value of your dollar could well decrease,โ€ he explains.

And finally, Chong notes that we are now well and truly in the โ€˜informationโ€™ age. Weโ€™re seeing the technology revolution โ€œplay out before our eyesโ€.

More tech businesses are genuinely useful, and accepted in peopleโ€™s everyday lives. In business, they are genuinely helping boost productivity and reducing human errors.

โ€œWeโ€™re seeing this technology change industries; change sectors.โ€

In the past, when weโ€™ve seen large sums of money poured into later-stage startups, itโ€™s come at the expense of those at the pre-seed, seed and Series-A stage.

But Chong says heโ€™s seeing no evidence of that happening now. In fact, quite the opposite seems to be happening.

The founders heading up later-stage startups are finding themselves with some cash in their own pockets, which theyโ€™re investing as angels.

Case in point, Who Gives a Crap’s $41.5 million raise including investment from the founders of Adore Beauty and Culture Amp, as well as from Canva’s Cameron Adams. 

โ€œThis is good news all round,โ€ Chong says.

โ€œIf youโ€™ve been a founder and you know how hard itโ€™s been, and you have had this level of success, doesnโ€™t it make sense to support founders who are on the journey you were on?

โ€œItโ€™s really rewarding seeing that.โ€