Funding & Investment in Travel
Ramp Raises $300 Million for Corporate Spend Platform: Startup Funding Roundup
Three startups involved in the travel industry announced fundraises this week totalling more than $316 million.
>>Ramp, a platform that helps companies manage a variety of expenses including travel, said it has raised $300 million in series D funding at a valuation of $5.8 billion.
It was co-led by Thrive Capital and Sands Capital, with participation from General Catalyst, Founders Fund, and former American Express CEO Ken Chenault, and other existing investors.
The company has now raised $1.7 billion since it was founded in 2019, according to Crunchbase, including $750 million raised in late 2021 and $300 million in August 2021.
Valuation for this round was lower than the last, according to a blog post by Ramp CEO Eric Glyman.
“While today’s valuation is lower than our peak in late 2021, given the broader startup market valuation reset and increased cost of capital, we know it reflects exceptional performance by our team and support from our customers. We care deeply about delivering our investors a similarly exceptional return over the long run, but we are not interested in the short-term ups and downs of the broader market,” Glyman said.
The company earlier this year launched Ramp for Travel through partnerships with Spain-based corporate travel agency TravelPerk and Flight Centre’s Corporate Traveler, as well as Lyft and WeWork. The idea is that with these agencies, Ramp automatically collects receipts from any bookings, removing the need to submit expenses.
The travel platform also integrates each client’s travel policies and provides their employees with corporate cards, which are embedded with controls and limits on flights, hotels, and more.
Ramp now has more than 15,000 clients, including Eventbrite, Shopify, Poshmark, and Discord. The company said its transaction volume has increased by over six times since its previous fundraise.
The funding will go toward expanding business, hiring, and strengthening the product.
>>FlyAkeed, a corporate travel platform based in Saudi Arabia, has raised $15.2 million in series A funding.
It was led by Saudi Arabia-owned Sanabel Investments and Elm Company, with participation from Artal Capital and Al Rajhi Partners .
FlyAkeed said its platform can be used by client companies to book travel for employees, taking into account policies of each respective company. Once the employee makes a reservation through the platform, the action is forwarded to the company’s travel manager for approval. The travel manager can also manage and monitor all reservations through the platform.
The funding will go toward expanding into more regions of Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries, as well as building out payments and cost management tools for business trips.
>>Goodwings, a corporate travel management platform focused on sustainability, has raised $1.5 million in a late seed round. The funds come from Global Cleantech Capital, JTB USA, and existing investors.
The Denmark-based company said its travel management platform includes features meant to measure and reduce the carbon footprint related to travel. One feature is that when a company books a business trip through the platform, Goodwings purchases sustainable aviation fuel on the client’s behalf. Goodwings also offers a cashback model meant to incentivize steps taken to reduce footprint.
The funding will go toward expanding business and adding tools that can help the growing number of businesses that are required to disclose emissions to reach net-zero goals.
Company | Stage | Lead | Raise |
---|---|---|---|
Ramp | Series D | Thrive Capital and Sands Capital | $300 Million |
FlyAkeed | Series A | Sanabel Investments and Elm Company | $15.2 million |
Goodwings | Late seed | Unspecified | $1.5 million |
Skift Cheat Sheet
Seed capital is money used to start a business, often led by angel investors and friends or family.
Series A financing is typically drawn from venture capitalists. The round aims to help a startup’s founders make sure that their product is something that customers truly want to buy.
Series B financing is mainly about venture capitalist firms helping a company grow faster. These fundraising rounds can assist in recruiting skilled workers and developing cost-effective marketing.
Series C financing is ordinarily about helping a company expand, such as through acquisitions. In addition to VCs, hedge funds, investment banks, and private equity firms often participate.
Series D, E, and, beyond These mainly mature businesses and the funding round may help a company prepare to go public or be acquired. A variety of types of private investors might participate.
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Funding & Investment in Travel
Pattaya adapts to welcoming Indians and Westerners, while hoping for Chinese tourism’s return
PATTAYA, Thailand — As Thailand continues promoting its “Welcome All” tourism revival campaign, some foreign visitors in Pattaya are quietly wondering: What happens if the Chinese return — and what if they don’t?
Strolling along Jomtien Beach or lounging in bars on Soi Buakhao, it’s not uncommon to hear debates about whether Pattaya’s fortunes still hinge on mass Chinese tourism, or if the city has already moved on.
“They’ll be back,” said one longtime European retiree. “Just as soon as they realize there’s nothing to do in Vietnam or elsewhere.”
But not everyone agrees. “No one really cares about Chinese tourists,” one tourist bluntly claimed. “They’ve never been big spenders and will never be. Get more Westerners — they’re the real big spenders.”
It’s a sentiment echoed by others who say Western retirees are the real financial engine behind Pattaya’s nightlife and hospitality industries. “Retirees can spend 10,000 baht a night,” said a bar owner. “Chinese groups come, take pictures, and maybe spend much less than that as per person.”
However, some locals are less certain. “Indians have taken over,” one Pattaya shopkeeper shrugged. “Chinese aren’t too keen on coming here now.”
But another argued, “Maybe you haven’t seen the Chinese eat and spend — they do it easily here, especially in restaurants and shopping malls.”
Yet despite the critiques, businesses haven’t given up on the return of Chinese mass tourism. Many remember the packed tour buses and back-to-back bookings before the pandemic. “Obviously, you haven’t seen nothing yet,” said a Thai tour guide, optimistic about a comeback.
The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) is working hard, busting their whole office to make the return happen sooner or later — arranging chartered flights, fast lanes at airports, elevated safety measures, and AI-aided security to welcome visitors back smoothly and confidently.
Others remain skeptical — comparing hopes for the Chinese revival to the long-dashed expectations of Japanese tourist rebounds after the 1991 economic crash. “They are the same people who awaited the revival in the number of Japanese tourists,” one expat remarked dryly.
For now, Pattaya waits — balancing its hopes on a mix of returning Chinese visitors, Indian family tours, and Western retirees. One thing is clear: no one group will carry the city forward alone.
Funding & Investment in Travel
Typhoon Wipha causes travel chaos as hundreds of flights canceled in Hong Kong
HONG KONG, July 20 — Hong Kong issued its third-highest tropical cyclone warning in the early hours of Sunday as Typhoon Wipha drew nearer, with authorities cancelling classes and grounding hundreds of flights.
Wipha was located around 280 kilometres southeast of Hong Kong as of midnight (1600 GMT), according to Hong Kong’s weather observatory.
The observatory has hoisted the T8 warning signal, meaning that “winds with mean speeds of 63 kilometres per hour or more are expected”.
The storm was expected to keep intensifying, moving across the northern part of the South China Sea and edging closer to the coast of China’s Guangdong province.
“There will be frequent heavy squally showers and thunderstorms over the region. Seas will be high with swells,” the observatory added.
China’s Hainan and Guangdong provinces were also put on high alert, state news agency Xinhua reported Saturday.
More than 250 flights servicing Hong Kong had been cancelled as of late Saturday, according to the website of the city’s international airport.
Hong Kong’s Airport Authority asked travellers to prepare for “significant flight cancellations or delays” and said that no passenger flights are expected to depart the city before Sunday noon.
Authorities suspended Sunday’s classes at all day schools and daycare centres.
Bus services are expected to be halted until midday Sunday.
Wipha brought heavy rains and flooding to the Philippines and two people have been reported missing, according to the country’s National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council. — AFP
Funding & Investment in Travel
Tourist boat capsizes during a storm in Vietnam, leaving 34 dead. 8 remain missing
… , Vietnam — (AP) — A boat carrying tourists capsized during a sudden thunderstorm … most of the passengers were tourists, from Hanoi, including about 20 …
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