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Indonesia’s GoTo plans to cut over 1,000 jobs in bid to reach profit

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Indonesia’s largest Internet company, GoTo Group, is planning to cut more than 1,000 jobs as it seeks to trim costs and shore up its finances, according to people familiar with the matter.

The reduction, equal to more than 10 per cent of its workforce, will affect all divisions, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the deliberations are private. Shares of the company rose as much as 9.6 per cent in Jakarta, the biggest intraday gain in almost two months.

GoTo joins technology giants, from Meta Platforms to Apple, that are cutting staff or pausing hiring after years of heady expansion succumbed to a global economic downturn. Job cuts in the tech industry are nearing levels seen in the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic, as companies both large and small curtail ambitions and brace for tough times ahead.

The ride-hailing, e-commerce and fintech company and its publicly traded peers such as Sea Limited and Grab Holding – all of which are loss-making – have seen valuations drop as they navigate an economic slowdown, rising interest rates and accelerating inflation. GoTo executives have said they are trying to balance spending on growth with the firm’s effort to reach profitability.

The Jakarta-based company, which also operates in Singapore and Vietnam, may announce the cuts to its employees in the coming weeks, the people said. The size of the reduction may change, they said. A representative for GoTo declined to comment.

GoTo is initiating the staff cuts as it prepares to unveil quarterly results on Nov 21. In August, it reported that its second-quarter adjusted loss before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation widened to 4.14 trillion rupiah (S$369.4 million) from a pro forma loss of 3.9 trillion rupiah a year earlier.

Formed through a merger of ride-hailing provider Gojek and e-commerce firm Tokopedia, the company went public in April in one of the year’s biggest initial public offerings, but its shares have lost about 40 per cent since.

GoTo has said it is in talks with its owners for a controlled sale of their stakes, seeking to avoid a potential stock slump when a lock-up on their holdings ends on Nov 30. GoTo had 9,630 permanent employees at the end of June, according to its quarterly financial statement, which did not disclose the number of non-permanent staff. It had 455 non-permanent employees at the end of 2021, a number that has changed little since, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Source: Bloomberg

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