<p>Battered by lockdowns and movement restrictions in the coronavirus pandemic, ride-hailers around the world are cutting jobs and pay, and slashing other costs. In Southeast Asia, the pandemic has raised doubts whether the ride-hailing firms can maintain their promise of improving the lives of millions of poor.</p>.<div><p class="bodytext">Here's a look at what the companies are doing do tackle the fallout of the coronavirus.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>DIDI CHUXING:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">Didi Chuxing, China's biggest ride-hailing company which counts SoftBank Group as a backer, saw its ride sharing orders in China recover this month to levels seen over the same period a year earlier, its CEO told Reuters on Monday.</p><p class="bodytext">The recovery in orders comes as most of China has reopened for business. China, where the coronavirus emerged late last year, has seen a sharp fall in cases since March.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>UBER:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">Global ride-hailer Uber Technologies Inc said in June trip requests were gradually picking up, but still remained significantly below prior year levels, as several countries start to lift coronavirus-led restrictions.</p><p class="bodytext">Uber announced last month it would concentrate on its core businesses in ride-hailing and food delivery and cut 23% of its workforce in an attempt to become profitable despite the coronavirus pandemic.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>LYFT:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">U.S. ride-hailing firm Lyft Inc said last week that rides on its platform rose 26% in May from the previous month, with strong growth from cities where coronavirus-induced restrictions have been eased.</p><p class="bodytext">Lyft said in a regulatory filing it cut 17 % of its staff and furloughed hundreds in May.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>OLA:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">SoftBank-backed Indian ride-hailing company Ola said in May it would cut 1,400 jobs, or about 35% of its workforce, as it navigates a strict coronavirus lockdown that has halted 95% of its business.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>BOLT:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">Bolt, a popular ride-sharing system in Eastern Europe and Africa, said in May it has raised 100 million euros and would use it to boost market share in a sector hurt by COVID-19.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>GRAB:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">SoftBank-backed Grab, which operates in eight Southeast Asian countries, said in May it is preparing for a potentially “long winter”, as the ride-hailing firm’s revenue takes a hit from the coronavirus outbreak.</p><p class="bodytext">The company said the pandemic was the single biggest crisis to affect the eight-year-old company, with volumes in its ride-hailing business down by double-digit percentages in some countries. It offered some staff unpaid leave and asked senior executives to take salary cuts.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>GOJEK:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">Gojek announced last week that Facebook Inc and PayPal Holdings Inc had invested in its funding round.</p><p class="bodytext">The ride-hailer and payments company operates in four markets, but is focused on Indonesia, which is slowly easing lockdowns in its biggest cities.</p></div>
<p>Battered by lockdowns and movement restrictions in the coronavirus pandemic, ride-hailers around the world are cutting jobs and pay, and slashing other costs. In Southeast Asia, the pandemic has raised doubts whether the ride-hailing firms can maintain their promise of improving the lives of millions of poor.</p>.<div><p class="bodytext">Here's a look at what the companies are doing do tackle the fallout of the coronavirus.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>DIDI CHUXING:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">Didi Chuxing, China's biggest ride-hailing company which counts SoftBank Group as a backer, saw its ride sharing orders in China recover this month to levels seen over the same period a year earlier, its CEO told Reuters on Monday.</p><p class="bodytext">The recovery in orders comes as most of China has reopened for business. China, where the coronavirus emerged late last year, has seen a sharp fall in cases since March.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>UBER:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">Global ride-hailer Uber Technologies Inc said in June trip requests were gradually picking up, but still remained significantly below prior year levels, as several countries start to lift coronavirus-led restrictions.</p><p class="bodytext">Uber announced last month it would concentrate on its core businesses in ride-hailing and food delivery and cut 23% of its workforce in an attempt to become profitable despite the coronavirus pandemic.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>LYFT:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">U.S. ride-hailing firm Lyft Inc said last week that rides on its platform rose 26% in May from the previous month, with strong growth from cities where coronavirus-induced restrictions have been eased.</p><p class="bodytext">Lyft said in a regulatory filing it cut 17 % of its staff and furloughed hundreds in May.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>OLA:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">SoftBank-backed Indian ride-hailing company Ola said in May it would cut 1,400 jobs, or about 35% of its workforce, as it navigates a strict coronavirus lockdown that has halted 95% of its business.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>BOLT:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">Bolt, a popular ride-sharing system in Eastern Europe and Africa, said in May it has raised 100 million euros and would use it to boost market share in a sector hurt by COVID-19.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>GRAB:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">SoftBank-backed Grab, which operates in eight Southeast Asian countries, said in May it is preparing for a potentially “long winter”, as the ride-hailing firm’s revenue takes a hit from the coronavirus outbreak.</p><p class="bodytext">The company said the pandemic was the single biggest crisis to affect the eight-year-old company, with volumes in its ride-hailing business down by double-digit percentages in some countries. It offered some staff unpaid leave and asked senior executives to take salary cuts.</p><p class="bodytext"><strong>GOJEK:</strong></p><p class="bodytext">Gojek announced last week that Facebook Inc and PayPal Holdings Inc had invested in its funding round.</p><p class="bodytext">The ride-hailer and payments company operates in four markets, but is focused on Indonesia, which is slowly easing lockdowns in its biggest cities.</p></div>