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Popular shopping app Wish is raising around $500 million in a new investment

The fast-growing startup also raised $500 million last year.

Wish CEO Peter Szulczewski
Wish CEO Peter Szulczewski
Wish CEO Peter Szulczewski
Wish
Jason Del Rey
Jason Del Rey has been a business journalist for 15 years and has covered Amazon, Walmart, and the e-commerce industry for the last decade. He was a senior correspondent at Vox.

Wish, the maker of the No. 2 shopping app of the same name, is raising a new investment of around $500 million, according to multiple sources familiar with the deal.

The round is valuing the e-commerce startup somewhere above its previous $3.5 billion valuation but lower than $5 billion. Temasek, the investment firm owned by the government of Singapore, is one of the lead investors in the new round, one source said.

Wish has commitments for the vast majority of the $500 million already, but is still in discussions with other investors for additional funds that would push the raise to half a billion dollars, one of the people said.

Wish did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A Temasek spokesperson declined to comment.

Wish, based in San Francisco, sells a wide assortment of low-priced, no-brand goods through its core Wish app, as well as other apps called Geek and Mama. Items like $4 watches and $7 sweatpants are shipped directly from Chinese manufacturers, which helps keep prices way down but also can result in deliveries that take several weeks. The goods are the type of items you might come across on Alibaba’s Taobao marketplace or its AliExpress app.

Wish has been investing in warehouse space so it can speed up delivery times by storing popular items closer to where shoppers live. The program, called Wish Express, launched recently and has brought down delivery times to six days, one person said.

The Wish app is generally ranked only behind Amazon in the shopping category of app stores. The startup has been a heavy spender on online ads, and was at one time Facebook’s No. 1 advertiser. The company has succeeded in building a browsing experience that is entertaining and a discounting strategy that encourages impulse purchases. But it still has work to do in weeding out low-quality goods that disappoint shoppers.

In an interview with Recode last year, Wish CEO Peter Szulczewski said he believes his company’s apps could eventually cross $1 trillion in gross sales. Today, Wish does a couple of billion dollars, and takes a cut of around 12 percent to 15 percent as its revenue.

You can come hear an update on Wish in person on Dec. 6, when Szulczewski headlines an evening Code Commerce event in San Francisco alongside Jack Dorsey and Apple Pay chief Jennifer Bailey.

Wish previously raised a $500 million investment round in 2015, led by Yuri Milner’s DST Global. The company’s other investors include GGV Capital, Founders Fund and Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com, which invested $50 million in the company.

Business Insider first reported that Wish was fundraising, and that investors in this most recent round would recoup their investment ahead of previous investors in the event of a disappointing sale of the company.

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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