A Gojek representative declined to comment. Amazon couldn’t immediately be reached for comment outside of normal business hours. The Wall Street Journal earlier reported on the discussions.
The move could mark Amazon’s most significant investment in Indonesia, one of the last frontiers of e-commerce. The Seattle-based retail giant took its first step into the region in 2017 when it entered Singapore with Amazon Prime Now. But in Indonesia, by far the region’s biggest and most promising market with 260 million people, it has no presence.
By contrast, Chinese tech titans have made inroads into the region recently. Alibaba Group Holding spent billions of dollars to acquire online shopping company Lazada Group and invested in homegrown Indonesian e-commerce companies Tokopedia PT and Bukalapak. Tencent Holdings has backed Sea, whose mobile shopping unit Shopee is battling fiercely with Lazada.
Gojek debuted its app for hailing motorbike taxis in Jakarta in 2015. Since then, the company has evolved into a “super app” – part ride-sharing service, part food-delivery business and part digital-wallet provider. It also offers a dozen other on-demand services such as booking a cleaner and medicine delivery.
As part of the ongoing Series F funding round, Gojek – valued at US$10 billion ($13.9 billion), according to CB Insights – has secured investments from Visa Inc., Thailand’s Siam Commercial Bank, Mitsubishi Motors Corp., Mitsubishi Corp. and Mitsubishi UFJ Lease & Finance Co. this year. The terms of those deals were not disclosed.