San Diego Union-Tribune

UBER OFFLOADS BIKE, SCOOTER BUSINESS

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Uber lost $2.9 billion in the first quarter as its overseas investment­s were hammered by the coronaviru­s pandemic, but the company is looking to its growing food delivery business as well as aggressive cost-cutting to ease the pain.

The ride-hailing giant said Thursday it is offloading Jump, its bike and scooter business, to Lime, a company in which it is investing $85 million. Jump had been losing about $60 million a quarter.

“While our Rides business has been hit hard by the ongoing pandemic, we have taken quick action to preserve the strength of our balance sheet, focus additional resources on Uber Eats, and prepare us for any recovery scenario,” said CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi in a statement. “Along with the surge in food delivery, we are encouraged by the early signs we are seeing in markets that are beginning to open back up.”

On Wednesday, Uber said it was cutting 3,700 full-time workers, or about 14 percent of its workforce.

Uber brought in revenue of $3.54 billion in the first quarter, up 14 percent from the same time last year.

Revenue in its Eats meal delivery business grew 53 percent as customers shuttered at home opted to order in. The company exited markets where its food delivery business was unprofitab­le, including the Czech Republic, Egypt and Honduras. But it added key accounts including Chipotle, Dunkin’ and Shake Shack, and it enabled delivery from grocery and convenienc­e stores.

 ?? UBER ?? After losing $2.9 billion in its first quarter, Uber is offloading its Jump business and concentrat­ing on food delivery.
UBER After losing $2.9 billion in its first quarter, Uber is offloading its Jump business and concentrat­ing on food delivery.

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