The change-up marks an about-face for GoTo, which in January said Walujo, 50, would run the company for years to come. The former investment banker helped usher the Indonesian ride-hailing and delivery giant to its first profit over a two-and-a-half-year tenure as the CEO. But the company lost more than 40% of its value over the same period, and he also opposed a takeover by Singapore’s Grab.
Shares of GoTo climbed as much as 4.7% in early Jakarta trading on Monday, giving the company a market value of about US$5 billion ($6.54 billion). Grab, traded in New York, has a market capitalisation of US$20 billion.
Patuwo, 49, is now set to steer a company mired in a persistent funk, grappling with a global shift towards artificial intelligence and preparing to revive talks with Grab. The likelihood of a takeover — after years of on-and-off discussions — is increasing after Indonesia’s government said it’s talking to the two companies about a deal.
The country’s sovereign wealth fund, Danantara, is set to get involved in a plan to combine the companies. The fund began exploring a minority stake in a combined entity early this year, people familiar with the matter said in June.
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Patuwo joined the company more than seven years ago from an Indonesian conglomerate, according to his LinkedIn profile. He started at the ride-hailing arm Gojek, building relationships with drivers and merchants and expanding its network across the country. Patuwo then moved to head payments and financial services.
Among other leadership changes, GoTo said it’s appointing co-founder Andre Soelistyo to the board of commissioners. Soelistyo, who headed the company before he was replaced by Walujo, helped carry out the merger of Gojek and e-commerce firm Tokopedia that created Indonesia’s biggest internet company. Previously, he was an executive director at Northstar Group, Walujo’s former private equity firm.
GoTo shareholders will vote on matters including the leadership shift in an extraordinary general meeting on Dec 17.
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