Startups

Lhoopa raises $80M to spur more affordable housing in the Philippines

Kommentar

Lhoopa co-founders Marc-Olivier Caillot and Sabrina Tan
Image Credits: Lhoopa

A lack of affordable housing is a growing problem worldwide, even in emerging markets with significant demand. That’s in part because traditional developers and real estate companies focus on serving people looking for luxury houses, and want to avoid the immense operating expenses associated with affordable housing, which eat into gross margins over time.

Enter Lhoopa.

The Singaporean-headquartered startup uses a mix of technology and decentralized operations, partnering with local professionals, including brokers and building contractors, to solve the problem specifically for people looking to buy affordable homes. The six-year-old startup has kicked off its service in the Philippines, a market with unfilled demand of around around 6.5 million units for low-income earners.

Marc-Olivier Caillot (co-founder and CEO) and Sabrina Tan (co-founder and president) founded Lhoopa in 2018, shortly after moving to the Philippines from the U.S. and experiencing firsthand the lack of platforms for searching for affordable housing.

“Most people can afford an affordable home, but no one wants to build it for them because traditional developers believe they don’t make enough money out of it,” Caillot told TechCrunch in an exclusive interview.

An average affordable house in the Philippines ranges between $10,000-$35,000 based on social demographics of the social class Lhoopa targets, which includes minimum-wage earners such as blue-collar, community and factory workers. In contrast, houses usually sold in the country can range from $100,000 all the way to luxury homes of $20 million or so.

Lhoopa has developed a technology platform that uses machine learning and AI to analyze market trends based on the data it gets from the listings created by local agents and other channels. Once it identifies properties, the startup sends them to the brokers and contractors in its network to ascertain which can be bought, renovated or built up to make them available to potential buyers. The startup also digitizes bureaucratic process flows using its technology to make documentation available to multiple stakeholders.

Lhoopa employees looking at the software dashboard.
Image Credits: Lhoopa

Caillot told TechCrunch that the startup monitors around 9,000 different areas across the Philippines and can identify undervalued properties anywhere in the country.

Unlike a housing marketplace, Lhoopa does not connect directly with the customer. Instead, it allows local agents to sell properties through their side and take care of services such as loan applications and purchase documentation.

“What makes us very unique is that we totally decentralized real estate, so we do not have anyone on the ground [from our end], and our brokers and contractors are the partners on the ground to do the work for us,” the co-founder said.

Lhoopa has developed dedicated apps for its broker and contractor partners. The app for brokers lets them find buyers from the available listings in real time, while the one for contractors allows them to upload pictures and videos of their work to coordinate with the head office remotely as the progress in their construction. The data from these apps is uploaded to Lhoopa’s system, which enables the startup to pay commissions to brokers and send payments to contractors based on their work.

Lhoopa plans to expand its target customer base and make housing available to people who do not have full-time employment, such as gig workers on app-based platforms like Grab.

The freshly infused round includes $20 million in equity, co-led by the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation (IFC) and Wavemaker Partners, with participation from Pavilion Capital, 10X Group, Concentric Equity Partners, UAE-based Mirath Investments and U.S.-based NataRock Partners Fund. Existing investors Patamar Capital and Tekton Ventures also participated in this round. The funding also includes $60 million in debt from development financial institutions such as the Asian Development Bank and the United States International Development Finance Corporation, as well as the U.K.-based debt provider Lendable.

Caillot told TechCrunch that the debt was required to expand their real estate acquisition and construction operations. The startup decided not to liquidate much of its holding for a significant investment against equity as it was already profitable, he said.

Lhoopa aims to utilize the fresh funding to grow its presence in the Philippines and even go beyond the country and expand to other Southeast Asian countries, with plans to enter at least one country in the next 18 months. The firm has 95 employees, and around 5,000 agents and 100 contractor groups.

To date, Lhoopa has sold over 2,500 affordable houses in more than 58 cities in the Philippines, and Caillot told TechCrunch that the startup will provide over 15,000 affordable homes in the Philippines alone over the next three years.

“With this new partnership, we hope to help close the gap in affordable housing and promote inclusive development by supporting a company that provides digital solutions to first-time homeowners and improved access to financing for low- to mid-income consumers,” said Jean-Marc Arbogast, country manager for the Philippines at IFC, in a prepared statement.

Before the latest round, Lhoopa had raised less than $4 million in equity and $2 million in debt.

More TechCrunch

CoinSwitch, a prominent Indian cryptocurrency exchange, is suing rival platform WazirX to recover trapped funds.

CoinSwitch sues WazirX to recover trapped funds

Web browser and search startup Brave has laid off 27 employees across the different departments, TechCrunch has learned. The company confirmed the layoffs but didn’t give more details about the…

Brave lays off 27 employees

Zepto co-founder Aadit Palicha told a group of analysts and investors on Tuesday that the three-year-old Indian delivery startup anticipates growth of 150% in the next 12 months, a remarkable…

Zepto, snagging $1 billion in 90 days, projects 150% annual growth

VerSe Innovation, India’s content tech startup, has acquired digital marketing firm Valueleaf Group to bolster its presence in the Indian digital ad space.

India’s VerSe buys Valueleaf to boost digital marketing

Astrobotic’s Peregrine lunar lander failed to reach the moon because of a problem with a single valve in the propulsion system, according to a report on the mission released Tuesday.…

One busted valve led to the failure of Astrobotic’s $108M Peregrine lunar lander mission

Meta and Spotify are exploring deeper music integration in Meta’s Instagram app. New findings indicate the companies are testing a feature that would allow users to continuously share what music…

Meta and Instagram spotted developing a new social music-sharing feature

In Latin American countries like Brazil and Chile, messaging platform WhatsApp has become one of the most popular apps to use to buy things online. It was even the e-commerce…

How Techstars, Meta helped profitable LatAm startup Mercately raise a $2.6M seed

Before entrepreneur and investor Mike Lynch died along with six others after the yacht they were on capsized in a storm last week, the party was celebrating Lynch’s victory in…

Will HP still demand $4B from Mike Lynch’s estate?

How many times does the letter “r” appear in the word “strawberry”? According to formidable AI products like GPT-4o and Claude, the answer is twice. Large language models (LLMs) can…

Why AI can’t spell ‘strawberry’

The SEC has updated its limits to the amount of money a “qualified venture fund” can raise to $12 million from $10 million.

The SEC just made life a little easier for smaller VCs

Tinder removed the U.S. military ads, saying the campaign violated the company’s policies.

The US military’s latest psyop? Advertising on Tinder

Welcome to TechCrunch Fintech! This week, we’re looking at the craziness that is Bolt’s proposed fundraise, how much money Synapse’s founder has raised for his new venture, just how much…

Just how much cash does Stripe have?

In an effort to improve its security measures, Lyft announced Tuesday a new rider verification pilot program to help drivers verify riders’ identities and ensure that they are indeed who they say…

Lyft follows in Uber’s footsteps with a rider verification program

Update: The Polaris Dawn launch has been pushed back a day and is now planned for Wednesday, August 28 after a helium leak was detected ahead of its takeoff. After…

Polaris Dawn will push the limits of SpaceX’s human spaceflight program — here’s how to watch it launch live

Meta will be shutting down Spark AR, its platform of third-party AR tools and content, effective January 14, 2025.

Creators are angered by Meta’s Spark AR shutdown, saying they’ll be out of work with little notice

Waymo said Tuesday it will start offering riders 24/7 access to curbside pickups and drop-offs at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport terminals 3 and 4 — yet another example of…

Waymo expands its curbside robotaxi service to Phoenix airport

Some believe open source AI is a way to break out of the familiar proprietary software quagmire that the technology has predictably fallen into. Hugging Face’s Irene Solaiman and AI2’s…

Is open source AI possible, let alone the future? Find out at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

It’s back-to-school season, and that often means a surge in expenses. Or perhaps you’ve recently graduated and are navigating the job hunt. Either way, your wallet might be feeling the…

Students and recent grads: Save on TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 tickets

Snapchat is officially rolling out native support for iPad, the company announced in the app’s latest release notes. Since Snapchat’s launch in 2011, the social networking app has only been…

13 years later, Snapchat finally rolls out native support for iPads

At the end of the six-month effort, the startup is aiming to have prototype parts to show to NASA.

Whisper Aero is working with NASA to bring its ultra-quiet tech to outer space

A group of hackers linked to the Chinese government used a previously unknown vulnerability in software to target U.S. internet service providers, security researchers have found.  The group known as…

Chinese government hackers targeted US internet providers with zero-day exploit, researchers say

Elon Musk’s X has already declared it aims to compete with LinkedIn for job listings and PayPal for payments. Now, it wants to take on the likes of Zoom, Google…

X is testing a video conferencing tool

San Francisco-based data infrastructure startup Cribl has raised $319 million in a Series E funding tranche led by new investor GV (Alphabet’s corporate venture arm) with participation from GIC, CapitalG,…

Data infrastructure startup Cribl raises $319M at a $3.5B valuation

Apple has struck a deal with Airtel to provide the Indian telecom giant’s subscribers with exclusive offers for its music streaming service. The partnership, announced on Tuesday, will also see…

Apple strikes telecom deals to reach more users in India

GrubMarket, the $3.6 billion food delivery and supply chain startup backed by Tiger Global, BlackRock and nearly 100 other investors, has snapped up another food delivery startup on its consolidation…

Food delivery is seeing more consolidation: GrubMarket snaps up FreshGoGo

Coined as the “Everyday Influencer” platform, Mavely is a social commerce app that enables users to earn commissions by sharing and recommending products from more than 1,250 brands, including Adidas,…

Mavely’s platform for everyday influencers is taking off

Supio uses generative AI to automate bulk data collection and aggregation for legal teams. It emerged from stealth Tuesday with a $25 million investment.

Supio brings generative AI to personal injury cases

Planera, scheduling and planning software for commercial construction projects, has raised $13.5 million to expand its reach and help general contractors with more features.

Planera raises $13.5M to help solve the gnarly problem of scheduling for construction contractors

The world of metal 3D printing has been in-flux this past year, the most notable example being Nano Dimension’s acquisition of Desktop Metal.

Markforged adds metal printing to its industrial 3D printer

nOps sells software designed to “optimize” the budgets that businesses allocate to cloud products and services.

nOps lands $30M to optimize AWS customers’ cloud spend