Sleek raises $5M to help companies incorporate and operate in Singapore and Hong Kong

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Sleek, a startup that is making it easier for other startups and companies to incorporate and operate in Singapore and Hong Kong, said
today it has extended its seed financing round to raise $5 million.The extended seed round for the two-year-old startup was led by private
investors Pierre Lorinet and Fabio Blom, and MI8, an Asia-focused European-backed private investment company.Sleek also counts a number of
high-profile individuals among its investors, including Martin Crawford, former Group CEO of corporate services giant Vistral; Olivier
Gerhardt, founder of Wavecell; Eric Barbier, founder of TransferTo; and Olivier Legrand, MD Asia at Linkedin.Sleek, founded by French
entrepreneurs Julien Labruyere and Adrien Barthel, today helps more than 2,000 startups and companies in Singapore and Hong Kong, an
additional market it extended to in mid-2019
Some of its clients include Yours Cosmetics (funded by Sequoia), Aspire Financials (which raised $30 million recently), Ematic Solutions,
Devialet, and oil and gas giant Total.As we wrote about them in June this year, Sleek not only helps startups and companies incorporate
themselves in Singapore (and now, Hong Kong), but also takes care of their accounting, taxes, regulatory compliance and other administrative
work.Sleek founders Julien Labruyere (right) and Adrien Barthel (left)Singapore and Hong Kong have emerged as epicenters for startups and
tech worldwide
“Hong Kong is a historical Asian financial hub, with six times more operating companies than in Singapore and an amazing business
ecosystem,” said Barthel, adding that despite the current situation in Hong Kong, the business is growing in the market.Both Singapore
and Hong Kong today offer a range of benefits, including government-backed startup programs to attract businesses, but setting up shops
there still requires a lot of paperwork.The traditional way of dealing with accounting and incorporation is a cumbersome task, and is the
last thing founders want to deal with, Barthel explained to TechCrunch in an interview
Plus, there’s no transparency in what the actual cost of doing these tasks would be, he said.Sleek offers a subscription business, where
it charges a fixed amount — about $600 — to its customers each year
Starting a second year, it waives some of its fee, said Barthel
“We also offer a simple dashboard for our clients to quickly check the progress we have made on any front,” he added.To make the deal
even better, Sleek offers vouchers with subscriptions to AWS, Stripe, Google Cloud — that they are likely going to use in their
businesses anyway — worth thousands of dollars
The startup also connects its partner entrepreneurs with financial institutions to help them access working capital.Barthel said before
signing up a client, Sleek does its own due diligence
“Singapore, for instance, has stringent KYC (know your customer) processes
Among other things, we use a number of APIs that are tied with all the major global databases to ensure that our potential clients are not
doing notorious business,” he said.Sleek, which today employs 85 people, will use the fresh capital to expand its tech team, build new
features for clients and increase its operational capacity.