Pakistani startup Bazaar raises $30m in Series A financing

Published August 24, 2021
Bazaar was founded in June 2020 with the aim of catering small and medium-sized enterprises in Pakistan. — Photo by author
Bazaar was founded in June 2020 with the aim of catering small and medium-sized enterprises in Pakistan. — Photo by author

Bazaar, a year-old B2B marketplace from Pakistan, has raised $30 million in Series A financing co-led by Silicon Valley-based Defy Partner and Singapore-based Wavemaker Partners.

According to a press statement, the round takes Bazaar’s total funding to $38m, “making it one of the best funded startups in the country”.

Other investors who took part in the round included US-based Acrew Capital, Japan’s Saison Capital, UAE’s Zayn Capital and B&Y Venture Partners and a Silicon Valley-based growth fund.

Bazaar was founded in June 2020 with the aim of catering small and medium-sized enterprises in Pakistan to procure inventory, manage their bookkeeping and access financial services to simplify and help them grow.

The startup was launched by Saad Jangda — formerly a product manager for ride-hailing and food delivery company Careem — and Hamza Jawaid, who was a management consultant at McKinsey & Company in Dubai.

“Through its multi-product offerings, Bazaar is bringing a range of products and services, such as commerce, accounting, payments, lending, invoicing and inventory management as part of one digital stack for small merchants,” a press release issued by the company stated.

“Bazaar’s early results and growth have been phenomenal, making it a market leader in the retail space in a short span of time.”

The startup says its B2B ecommerce marketplace is now live in Karachi and Lahore, while its digital ledger product Easy Khata is live across the country, with the company claiming to have already "served over 750,000 merchants since launch.”

Bazaar’s mission is to build an operating system for traditional retail in Pakistan. Through its B2B ecommerce platform and digital ledger product Easy Khata, Bazaar aims to help the 5 million small and medium-sized enterprises.

“We’ve been investing in FMCG B2B marketplaces across the region since 2017. We’re excited to support Bazaar as they solidify their market leadership and digitise Pakistan’s retail ecosystem,” said Paul Santos, managing partner at Wavemaker Partners.

The startup says it was tapping into "the $170 billion fragmented retail industry that was predominantly offline".

“This segment also lacks access to formal financial services, in a country that has the third-largest unbanked population in the world. At the same time, the country is undergoing a massive shift with its exponentially growing digital penetration due to cheap smartphones and mobile broadband availability,” it added.

Having secured Series A funding, Bazaar says it now plans to expand into more cities across Pakistan, broaden its product stack and scale its financial services offerings.

Follow Dawn Business on Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram and Facebook for insights on business, finance and tech from Pakistan and across the world.

Opinion

Editorial

Parallel force?
31 Aug, 2024

Parallel force?

THE proposed creation of a new parallel, uniformed, and armed force in Punjab with vast powers to intrude into the...
Invite to Modi
31 Aug, 2024

Invite to Modi

HOW will India react to Pakistan’s latest overture? It remains to be seen. For its part, Pakistan has, by inviting...
PM in Balochistan
31 Aug, 2024

PM in Balochistan

IN the wake of the recent terrorist rampage in Balochistan, the civilian and military leadership is trying to pick ...
Credit rating upgrade
Updated 30 Aug, 2024

Credit rating upgrade

Pakistan’s economy still isn’t in a position to hold its own without multilateral and bilateral help.
Refugee problem
30 Aug, 2024

Refugee problem

THE authorities are once again mobilising to ‘repatriate’ Afghan refugees, around half a million of whom have...
Press club curbs
Updated 30 Aug, 2024

Press club curbs

The state’s decision to curb activities at the Quetta Press Club is, in fact, a move towards enforcing censorship.