SoftBank-backed Oyo furloughs some U.S. workers as
coronavirus hits revenue
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[April 08, 2020] BENGALURU
(Reuters) - SoftBank-backed <9984.T> Oyo Hotels and Homes is furloughing
some employees to cut costs, it said on Wednesday, as lower travel due
to the coronavirus pandemic slams the hospitality industry.
The India-headquartered company said it would place an unspecified
number of employees on furloughs, or temporary leaves in the United
States and other countries. The U.S. is Oyo's third biggest market after
India and China.
Oyo said it was not currently considering job cuts in any market, adding
that revenue had dropped between 50% and 60% due to the outbreak. The
company did not specify a time period for the figures.
India's Economic Times daily on Wednesday reported
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/
small-biz/startups/newsbuzz/oyo-gives-pink-slips-to-us-staff/articleshow/75038719.cms
that Oyo had laid off hundreds of employees in the United States across
divisions such as sales, business development and human resources since
end-March.
Oyo's biggest investor SoftBank has been under growing financial strain,
with souring tech bets bringing it under pressure from activist investor
Elliott Management. The Japanese technology giant owns a roughly 46%
stake in Oyo.
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The logo of OYO, India's largest and fastest-growing hotel chain,
installed on a hotel building is pictured in an alley in New Delhi,
India, April 3, 2019. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
The coronavirus pandemic has infected over 1.4 million people globally and
killed 82,000, with the United States now accounting for the most number of
positive cases.
In India, Oyo said it would not take any action that impacts the "employment
status or salaries" of its more than 10,000 employees during an ongoing
three-week nationwide lockdown.
There were some "small yet encouraging green shoots of recovery" in markets
including China, Denmark and Japan, the company added.
Oyo has already laid off thousands of employees this year as it tries to cut
costs. Its net loss grew more than sixfold to $335 million in the year ended
March 2019.
(Reporting by Sachin Ravikumar and Chandini Monnappa; Editing by Amy Caren
Daniel)
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