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EUROPE Australia hikes but tempers its outlook
  + stars: | 2023-11-07 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
Two women walk next to the Reserve Bank of Australia headquarters in central Sydney, Australia February 6, 2018. The Aussie dollar fell more than 0.8% and Australian government bonds rallied because the 25 basis point hike by the Reserve Bank of Australia came with a softening of language on whether further hikes would be needed. It was an otherwise quiet session in the absence of major updates that might have consequences for the interest rate outlook. Last week's chaos in Chinese money markets has subsided but it left behind a glimpse of financial pressures beneath the surface and the challenges around China's uneven recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. British house prices, German industrial output and European producer prices are due later on Tuesday, as are earnings from UBS (UBSG.S).
Persons: Daniel Munoz, Tom Westbrook, Read, SoftBank, Benjamin Netanyahu, Fed's Waller, Logan, Schmid, ECB's de, Edmund Klamann Organizations: Reserve Bank of Australia, REUTERS, Bond, South, Read Reuters, UBS, 163rd Melbourne, NY, Thomson Locations: Sydney, Australia, Asia, Japan, British, Gaza
WeWork files for bankruptcy
  + stars: | 2023-11-07 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWeWork files for bankruptcyCNBC's Deirdre Bosa reports on the latest news from WeWork.
Persons: CNBC's Deirdre Bosa Locations: WeWork
WeWork's dizzying rise and protracted fall into Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Monday largely hinged on one man: Adam Neumann. By the time it filed for bankruptcy protection, WeWork was worth a mere $45 million. "As the co-founder of WeWork who spent a decade building the business with an amazing team of mission-driven people, the company's anticipated bankruptcy filing is disappointing," Neumann said in a statement to CNBC. In all, despite being removed from a management role years earlier, Neumann reportedly collected around $770 million in cash from the 2021 SPAC process alone. Neumann also still retained a stake in the company valued at around $722 million when WeWork debuted in 2021, Bloomberg reported.
Persons: Adam Neumann, WeWork, Neumann, who'd, outsized, SoftBank, it's, Andreesen Horowitz, there's Organizations: CNBC, Bloomberg Locations: WeWork, U.S
WeWork’s bankruptcy will increase financial stress on commercial landlords that have rented large chunks of their office buildings to the co-working company. About $270 billion in commercial real estate loans held by banks will come due in 2023, according to Trepp, a commercial real estate data provider. “This is another huge problem for the office market to contend with.”No single tenant can make or break the office market, he said. Around 42% of WeWork’s occupancies are in those three cities, according to CoStar, a commercial real estate data firm. Commercial real estate was hit hard by the pandemic, with fewer people returning to offices and spending money in downtown corridors.
Persons: WeWork, , Ermengarde Jabir, Goldman Sachs, Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, Peter Morgan, ” Alie Baumann, can’t, , ” Baumann, Van Nieuwerburgh Organizations: New, New York CNN, Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, Columbia Business School, Cities, New York City’s Locations: New York, America, Silicon, New York City, San Francisco, Boston, New York City . New York, NYC, New, United States, Columbia
Explainer: Why WeWork failed, and what is next
  + stars: | 2023-11-07 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +5 min
A WeWork logo is seen outside its offices in the Queens borough of New York City, U.S., November 7, 2023. WeWork was once the most valuable U.S. startup, worth $47 billion. The following explains WeWork's meteoric rise and fall that reshaped the office sector globally:What is WeWork? Just before WeWork filed for bankruptcy this week, Neumann said, "I believe that, with the right strategy and team, a reorganization will enable WeWork to emerge successfully." WeWork first tried to launch an IPO with Neumann as chief executive in 2019, with its parent, We Company, spending months preparing for the public offering.
Persons: Shannon Stapleton, WeWork, Adam Neumann, Rebekah Neumann, Miguel McKelvey, freewheeling, Neumann, Steve Clayton, Hargreaves Lansdown, Masayoshi Son, Oscar, Jared Leto, Anne Hathaway, Rebekah, Clayton, WeWork's, Cadwalader, Taft, Sam Stovall, SoftBank, Kannaki Deka, Susan Mathew, Anil D'Silva Organizations: REUTERS, Banks, JPMorgan Chase, Company, CFRA Research, Titanic, Thomson Locations: Queens, New York City, U.S, freewheeling Israel, Wickersham, Bengaluru
The rise and fall of WeWork
  + stars: | 2023-11-07 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe rise and fall of WeWorkCNBC’s Deirdre Bosa joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss WeWork filing for bankruptcy and the rise and fall of the company.
Persons: WeWork CNBC’s Deirdre Bosa
The company's shares cost more than $400 two years ago but now cost less than $1. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.3% to 6,977.10 after the central bank raised its key interest rate by 0.25 percentage points, to 4.35%. Elsewhere in Asia, shares rose in Taiwan but fell in Bangkok and Mumbai. Last week, the Federal Reserve held its main interest rate steady for a second straight time, leaving it at its highest level since 2001. It’s jacked up its federal funds rate from nearly zero in hopes of getting high inflation under control.
Persons: Korea’s Kospi, WeWork, Australia's, RBA, It’s, Brent Organizations: , Tokyo's Nikkei, Reserve Bank of Australia, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Treasury, Federal Reserve, Fed, New York Mercantile Exchange, U.S Locations: BANGKOK, Asia, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Shanghai, China, it's, Seoul, Taiwan, Bangkok, Mumbai, U.S, Saudi Arabia, Russia
WeWork rode the wave of the venture-capital frenzy, building a global real-estate empire worth more than any other U.S. startup before buckling and laying off thousands when funding ran dry under its turbulent co-founder and former chief executive Adam Neumann . Ultimately, though, it was a historic office-market bust that doomed the desk-rental giant.
Persons: WeWork, Adam Neumann
WeWork files for bankruptcy in federal court
  + stars: | 2023-11-06 | by ( Catherine Thorbecke | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +3 min
New York CNN —WeWork, the beleaguered coworking startup, has filed for bankruptcy protections in federal court. “Now is the time for us to pull the future forward by aggressively addressing our legacy leases and dramatically improving our balance sheet,” said David Tolley, WeWork CEO, in a news release. WeWork eventually went public roughly two years later at a much-reduced valuation of some $9 billion. In May, WeWork announced a leadership shakeup with the departure of its chairman and CEO Sandeep Mathrani, a real estate executive who investors hoped would save the company. David Tolley, a WeWork board member, stepped up as interim chief executive and was officially named CEO in October.
Persons: New York CNN — WeWork, , David Tolley, WeWork, Adam Neumann, Neumann, Sandeep Mathrani Organizations: New, New York CNN Locations: New York
NEW YORK (AP) — Trading in shares of WeWork were halted Monday as rumors swirl that the office sharing company, once valued as high as $47 billion, will seek bankruptcy protection. A WeWork spokesperson said last week that the company does not comment on speculation and did not immediately return messages after trading in the company's stock was halted Monday. Shares of WeWork, which cost more than $400 two years ago, could be had Monday for less than $1. In August, the New York company sounded the alarm over its ability to remain in business. And last week, WeWork disclosed a forbearance agreement with bondholders that extended negotiations by one week prior to triggering a default.
Persons: WeWork, Adam Neumann, Japan’s SoftBank, David Tolley Organizations: Street, New Locations: WeWork, New York
In September, WeWork said it would begin to renegotiate all its leases and exit certain locations. The company was renting nearly 20 million square feet of office space in June, more than any other company in the United States. Monday’s actions will not affect WeWork franchises outside the United States and Canada, the company said. WeWork’s demise is a blow for landlords who have leased a large proportion of their space to the company. It focused on leasing, rather than buying, office space and parceling it out to customers that included freelancers, small businesses and larger corporations.
Persons: WeWork, ” WeWork, Adam Neumann, Miguel McKelvey Locations: United States, Canada, WeWork, Lower Manhattan
NEW YORK (AP) — WeWork has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, a stunning fall for the office sharing company once seen as a Wall Street darling that promised to upend the way people went to work around the world. The company offered few specifics about the course of its restructuring, but noted in its filing that it was requesting the ability to cancel leases in particular locations that WeWork described as largely non-operational. All affected members have received advanced notice, the company said in a late Monday announcement.
Persons: — WeWork
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Persons: Dow Jones
For years, landlords around the world clamored to get WeWork into their office buildings, a love affair that made the co-working company the largest corporate tenant in New York and London. Now, WeWork is perhaps days away from a bankruptcy filing — and its demise could not come at a worse time for office landlords. With fewer employees going into the office since the pandemic, companies have slashed the amount of space they lease, causing one of the worst crunches in decades in commercial real estate. Many landlords have accepted lower rents from WeWork in recent years to keep it afloat, but its bankruptcy would be an enormous blow. Some landlords might quickly accept lower rents from WeWork as part of a bankruptcy reorganization and keep doing business with any new entity that emerges, but others might have to fight in court to get anything.
Locations: New York, London, WeWork
Backed by Japan's SoftBank, WeWork aimed to revolutionise the office market by taking long leases on large properties and renting the space to multiple smaller businesses on more flexible, shorter arrangements. Some leveraged property investors could struggle to earn enough rental income to service rising debt costs, they said. The number and volume of real estate loans due for refinancing in 2024 is unclear because many deals are struck privately between borrower and lender, Ed Daubeney, co-head, debt and structured finance, EMEA, at real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle, told Reuters. U.S. industrial and office real estate investment trusts (REITs) were seen 35.8% more likely to default, versus expectations a year ago. "We're at a massive turning point in the real estate investment market globally," Jose Pellicer, head of real estate strategy at M&G Real Estate, said.
Persons: Kate Munsch, Japan's SoftBank, WeWork, Jeffrey Havsy, Ed Daubeney, Jones Lang LaSalle, Savills, refinancings, What's, MSCI, Jefferies, Jose Pellicer, Sinead Cruise, Elisa Martinuzzi, Mark Potter Organizations: REUTERS, Media, Real Estate, Reuters, Analysts, Europe, Flex, BNP, G, Thomson Locations: San Francisco , California, U.S, York, New York, London, United States, Europe, Britain, Germany, California
Backed by Japan's SoftBank, WeWork aimed to revolutionise the office market by taking long leases on large properties and renting the space to multiple smaller businesses on more flexible, shorter arrangements. Some leveraged property investors could struggle to earn enough rental income to service rising debt costs, they said. The number and volume of real estate loans due for refinancing in 2024 is unclear because many deals are struck privately between borrower and lender, Ed Daubeney, co-head, debt and structured finance, EMEA, at real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle, told Reuters. U.S. industrial and office real estate investment trusts (REITs) were seen 35.8% more likely to default, versus expectations a year ago. "We're at a massive turning point in the real estate investment market globally," Jose Pellicer, head of real estate strategy at M&G Real Estate, said.
Persons: Kate Munsch, Japan's SoftBank, WeWork, Jeffrey Havsy, Ed Daubeney, Jones Lang LaSalle, Savills, refinancings, What's, MSCI, Jefferies, Jose Pellicer, Sinead Cruise, Elisa Martinuzzi, Mark Potter Organizations: REUTERS, Media, Real Estate, Reuters, Analysts, Europe, Flex, BNP, G, Thomson Locations: San Francisco , California, U.S, York, New York, London, United States, Europe, Britain, Germany, California
WeWork rode the wave of the venture-capital frenzy, building a global real-estate empire worth more than any other U.S. startup before buckling and laying off thousands when funding ran dry under its turbulent co-founder and former chief executive Adam Neumann . Ultimately, though, it was a historic office market bust that doomed the desk-rental giant.
Persons: WeWork, Adam Neumann
WeWork's inevitable retreat is here
  + stars: | 2023-11-02 | by ( Tom Carter | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +4 min
NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . It comes after the company warned that there was "substantial doubt" about its ability to stay in business back in August. A company that planned to 'change the world'Once the US's most valuable tech startup , WeWork has seen a dramatic fall from grace. Years later, WeWork's financial woes could have dire consequences for commercial real estate.
Persons: WeWork, , Masayoshi, Adam Neumann, Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, Neumann Organizations: Service, Beam, BBC, Street Journal, Reuters, Softbank, Columbia Business School Locations: London, Central London, Valley, WeWork
WeWork is planning to file for bankruptcy, according to multiple reports. The commercial real-estate start-up achieved a $47 billion valuation in 2019, after receiving investment from SoftBank. But its shares have cratered 99% since it made its stock-market debut in March 2021. WeWork reached a peak valuation of $47 billion back in January 2019, after netting $5 billion worth of direct investment from SoftBank. Between January 2019 and now WeWork's market capitalization has fallen from $47 billion to just $140 million – a staggering $46.9 billion wipeout that could extend even further if the bankruptcy reports prove to be true.
Persons: WeWork, , Adam Neumann, Vivek Ranadivé Organizations: Service, Street Journal, Reuters, SoftBank, Sacramento Kings Locations: SoftBank, Wednesday's premarket
Advanced Micro Devices — The chipmaker dipped more than 1% after issuing softer-than-expected revenue guidance for the fourth quarter. Match Group — The dating service platforms owner shed 8.3% on weaker-than-estimated revenue guidance for the fourth quarter. Wayfair — The online furniture retailer tumbled 12% after third quarter revenue missed analyst expectations. Yum reported $2.91 billion in revenue, while analysts had expected $3.06 billion in revenue, according to estimates from LSEG. Caesars Entertainment – The gaming stock rose 5% before the bell after topping Wall Street's third-quarter earnings expectations.
Persons: General Motors, Wayfair, Goldman Sachs, ZoomInfo, FactSet, Estee Lauder, , Kraft Heinz, Paycom, Fred Imbert, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin, Sarah Min Organizations: Street Journal, Ford, General, Barclays, CVS, Technologies, Humana, Kraft Heinz, FactSet, Yum China, , Caesars Entertainment, LSEG Locations: Aetna, China, LSEG
Nov 1 (Reuters) - WeWork shares (WE.N) tanked over 35% in premarket trading on Wednesday after media reports that the flexible workspace provider was planning to file for bankruptcy as early as next week. The bankruptcy filing would follow a series of troubles for the SoftBank-backed company since its IPO plans imploded in 2019 on skepticism over its business model of taking long-term leases and renting them for short term. WeWork is mulling over filing a Chapter 11 petition in New Jersey, the WSJ first reported on Tuesday. The stock was last trading at $1.45 before the opening bell, after losing about 96% of its value this year. Reporting by Medha Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini GanguliOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Susannah Streeter, Hargreaves Lansdown, Medha Singh, Shinjini Organizations: WSJ, Thomson Locations: New York, New Jersey, Bengaluru
WeWork, backed by Softbank and other top VC firms, was once worth $47 billion. AdvertisementAdvertisementWeWork just isn't working anymore, and the venture capitalists who backed the company when it was a high-flying startup haven't learned a thing from its disaster. When a $47 billion startup shrivels so drastically, who gets hurt? Then there's Neumann, who owned over 68 million shares of common stock and virtually all its Class C stock — nearly 20 million shares — earlier this year. Staggering as it might seem to blow away nearly $47 billion dollars, with those kinds of repercussions, WeWork isn't a warning for most of the venture capital community.
Persons: Softbank, haven't, , WeWork's, Adam Neumann, WeWork, Vivek Ranadivé, Fitch, there's Neumann, speck, Neumann, Andreessen Horowitz Organizations: Venture, Service, Street Journal, New York Stock Exchange, BowX, Golden State Warriors, Sacramento Kings, CNBC, Reuters, SEC, Insight Partners, Benchmark Locations: Sacramento, It's
WeWork’s shares plunge 37% on bankruptcy reports
  + stars: | 2023-11-01 | by ( Hanna Ziady | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
London CNN —WeWork’s shares plunged 37% in pre-market trading Wednesday, following news reports that the beleaguered company plans to file for bankruptcy as early as next week as its losses mount. The SoftBank-backed flexible workspace provider is considering filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in New Jersey, the Wall Street Journal and Reuters reported Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter. A bankruptcy filing would mark a spectacular reversal of fortunes for a company valued at $47 billion in 2019. The company’s demise has been years in the making, after it struggled to recover from a botched IPO in 2019. At the time, listing paperwork revealed larger-than-expected losses and potential conflicts of interest related to the company’s founder and then-CEO Adam Neumann.
Persons: London CNN —, , Russ Mould, AJ Bell, , SoftBank, Adam Neumann, WeWork Organizations: London CNN, Wall Street Journal, Reuters, CNN Locations: New Jersey
WeWork said Tuesday it entered into a seven-day forbearance agreement with its noteholders after skipping interest payments earlier this month. Photo: Ted Shaffrey/Associated PressWeWork is planning to file for bankruptcy as early as next week, according to people familiar with the matter, in what would mark a stunning reversal for the flexible-office-space venture that was once valued at $47 billion. New York-based WeWork is considering filing a chapter 11 petition in New Jersey, the people said.
Persons: WeWork, Ted Shaffrey Locations: New York, New Jersey
AdvertisementAdvertisementThe traditional auto industry has had more than a decade to build viable electric vehicle businesses. Again, maybe the traditional auto companies get a pass. WeWork-level lossesFord's EV business lost $1.3 billion, before interest and taxes, in the third quarter of 2023 – on just $1.8 billion of revenue. Detroit has responded with EV price cuts to try to compete with Tesla. Its auto business had a gross profit margin of more than 16% in Q3.
Persons: Tesla, , Ford, Elon, haven't, China's BYD, Goldman Sachs, Kelley, Mercedes, Price Organizations: Ford, GM, Service, General Motors, Toyota, Honda, Wall Street, EV, Detroit, Mercedes, Benz, Tesla, LG Energy, Auto Locations: Detroit
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