Caixin
Caixin Global – Latest China News & Headlines

Home >

TRENDING
Alibaba Tech Tapped to Provide Olympic Athletes With AI Assistants
Satellite-Maker Spacety Kicks Off IPO as China’s Commercial Space Race Heats Up
China's AutoFlight Rolls Out World’s First 5-Ton eVTOL
LATEST
China's AutoFlight Rolls Out World’s First 5-Ton eVTOL
Alibaba AI App Crashes After 3 Billion Yuan Giveaway Sparks Frenzy
Satellite Chipmaker Cygnus Raises $215 Million as China Internet-in-Space Push Accelerates
Alibaba Tech Tapped to Provide Olympic Athletes With AI Assistants
Satellite-Maker Spacety Kicks Off IPO as China’s Commercial Space Race Heats Up
Beijing Humanoid Robotics Hub Raises $100 Million in First Funding Round
Analysis: Alibaba’s New Processor Shows Applications Are Key to AI Chip Success
Aerofugia Raises Nearly $150 Million to Get Flying Taxis Certified
Alibaba Pledges $432 Million in Lunar New Year AI Subsidy War
In Depth: Megvii Co-Founder Is Back Riding the Latest AI Wave
China Fines Kuaishou Unit $3.8 Million for E-Commerce Violations
Chips Drive China’s Electronics Exports
Robots Take the Stage at China’s Spring Festival Gala
Alibaba Unveils New AI Chip to Rival Nvidia’s China Offerings
ASML Expects China Revenue Drop Following Backlog-Fueled Surge
China’s Telecom Industry Stalls as Traditional Revenue Dries Up
TikTok Outage Puts New U.S. Operations to the Test
Moonshot AI Gets More Into Agents With New Model
Texas Doubles Down on China Tech Ban, Adding AI and E-Commerce Giants
Chinese GPU-Maker Challenges Nvidia in Three-Year Development Plan

By Coco Feng / Nov 29, 2018 11:45 AM / Business & Tech

Photo: VCG

Photo: VCG

China's Tencent and global investment firm KKR have closed their $175-million investment in Filipino financial-technology company Voyager Innovations, a deal that was announced in October.

Voyager plans to raise another $40 million from the International Finance Corp. and IFC Emerging Asia Fund, thus upping the funding round to $215 million, according to its parent company, PLDT Inc., which is the Philippines' largest telecoms group.

The deal is part of Chinese companies' growing ambitions in the Philippines. Earlier this month, Caixin reported that a consortium led by the parent of China Telecom has been granted a “provisional” license to run a Philippine telecom network.

Support independent journalism from China. Subscribe to Caixin Global.

Share this article
Open WeChat and scan the QR code