Vehicles sit in traffic on a highway in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 16, 2021. (DIMAS ARDIAN / BLOOMBERG)

Southeast Asian technology startups defied the pandemic and attracted a similar level of investments in 2020 as the year before, outperforming most other emerging markets.

The region of about 650 million people is moving online fast, with countries such as Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam embracing e-commerce, fintech and transportation apps

The region’s tech startups raised US$8.2 billion, down 3.5 percent from 2019, research from Cento Ventures showed. That compares with a 31 percent drop in India and 38 percent in Africa, according to the Singapore-based venture-capital firm.

The region of about 650 million people is moving online fast, with countries such as Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam embracing e-commerce, fintech and transportation apps. Still, Southeast Asia trailed the US and the European Union, whose tech startups drew record investments last year and grew 13 percent and 15 percent, respectively, Cento said. Startups in China attracted 6 percent more funding than the year before.

ALSO READ: Philippines set to take rare, top spot for IPOs in Southeast Asia

“2020 offered a harsh reason to reassess how technology can be harnessed to maintain vital function of the society,” said Dmitry Levit, a partner at Cento, an early-stage investor which has backed startups including 2C2P, iPrice Group and Pomelo. “Investments into digital transformation of retail, food, financial services and logistics surged accordingly, and we’ll see more industries react similarly in 2021 and 2022.”

Almost half of the funds raised went into unicorns including Grab Holdings Inc, Gojek, Bukalapak.com and Traveloka. Deals of more than US$100 million accounted for 57 percent of the total investments, while those between US$50 million and US$100 million rose to a record US$1.1 billion, up 26 percent from a year ago.

READ MORE: SE Asia e-commerce gets lift

Indonesian startups clinched 70 percent of the capital invested in Southeast Asia, with Indonesian and Singaporean startups together accounting for 64 percent of the total number of deals, the report showed.