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Glassmaker View Inc. has filed for bankruptcy 3 years after its SPAC and is going private. SoftBank invested $1.1 billion in View, which has been dogged by cash and regulatory troubles. AdvertisementSoftBank has made headlines for prized investments that have filed for bankruptcy, including WeWork, Katerra, and genetic testing business Invitae. There's an addition to the list: View, which raised $1.1 billion from SoftBank in 2018. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: SoftBank, Organizations: Service, Business Locations: SoftBank, Milpitas , California
Modern tech-enabled versions of modular housing promise a faster, more sustainable solution to housing crises, according to experts. The fact that modular housing is also made in a controlled factory environment means less waste is generated, while also resulting in more energy-efficient homes. A 2022 report from industry group Make UK Modular highlighted that 80% fewer vehicle movements were needed to development sites with modular building. In the U.K. last year, Ilke Homes collapsed, while Legal & General moved to wind down its modular housing factory. By comparison, a Make UK Modular report published last year said more than 3,000 modular homes were being built in the U.K. annually, though there was capacity to build five times that number.
Persons: Prefabrication, William the Conqueror, Andrew Shepherd, Shepherd, Modulous, Jonatan Pinkse, Pinkse, Suzanne Peters, Daniel Paterson, prefabrication, Richard Valentine, Valentine, Selsey Organizations: Bloomberg, Getty, Sears, CNBC, University of Cambridge, Edinburgh Napier University, Ilke, Legal, King's College, Alliance Manchester Business School, Savills Research, McKinsey, Company, Ikea, Vonovia Locations: Foston, Derby, housebuilding, England, U.S, King's College London, Wales, Selsey, Sweden, Japan, prefabrication, Berlin, Germany
But the world of modular housing, which includes multi-unit apartment buildings and conventional-looking houses, is littered with companies that have gone bust. AdvertisementThese restrictive policies often reflect the lingering perception that factory-built homes are inferior to traditional housing, Erlich said. Investors aren't convinced there's sufficient and consistent demand for modular housing in most markets. They tend to be run by people with deep experience in the construction industry, Erlich said. AdvertisementDo you work in the modular housing industry?
Persons: , Mark Erlich, Katerra, Erlich, Andrew Justus, Justus, Biden, aren't, there's Organizations: Service, New England Regional, of Carpenters, Urban, Niskanen, of Housing, Motors, Avana, Factory, New York Times Locations: Silicon, California, Brooklyn, Manhattan, San Francisco Bay
Veev also promised they would be green and less expensive, thanks to its factory process. The Veev representative said "no employee was requested to do so as a policy." The Veev representative said "production lines were not idle," and design errors were inevitable because the company was still testing its product. "While the Series D money was committed, not all of it was received," the Veev representative said. "Veev and Lennar made a joint decision to stop building the Gramercy project," the Veev representative wrote.
Persons: Henry Ford, Veev, Lennar, Elon, Veev Veev, Amit Haller, Ami Avrahami, Dafna Akiva, Haller, Ari Rauch, Rauch, Bond, Calcalist, I've, Scott Long, thatit, Long, Veev's Organizations: Federal Reserve, Business, Katerra, Industry, American, BI, NSF, Fortune, Employees, Dow Chemical, Lennar, Gramercy, Hayward, Wall LLC Locations: Hayward , California, homebuilding, San Carlos , California, Tel Aviv, California
Credit Suisse lodges $440 mln London claim against SoftBank
  + stars: | 2023-04-19 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
[1/2] A view shows the logo of Credit Suisse on a building near the Hallenstadion where Credit Suisse Annual General Meeting took place, two weeks after being bought by rival UBS in a government-brokered rescue, in Zurich, Switzerland, April 4, 2023. REUTERS/Pierre AlbouyLONDON, April 19 (Reuters) - Credit Suisse (CSGN.S) has lodged a $440 million claim against Japan's SoftBank Group Corp (9984.T) in London as it presses ahead with formal proceedings in a dispute borne from the failure of Greensill Capital, a finance firm. A SoftBank spokesperson accused Credit Suisse of trying to shift blame for its own poor investment decisions and said the case was entirely without merit. "Credit Suisse continues to prioritize maximising recovery for investors in the supply chain finance funds," a spokesperson for the Swiss lender said. Credit Suisse is the biggest name to date to become ensnared in market turbulence unleashed by the collapse of U.S. lenders Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.
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