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Topline: WeWorkâs troubles look far from over, with massive layoffs, a fiasco with its phone booths and a tough choice between two financial bailout plans as the company scrambles to raise cash and save its business.
- WeWork is expected to lay off at least 2,000 peopleâaround 13% of its staffâas early as this week, the Guardian first reported.
- Employees described a âtoxicâ atmosphere, with little getting done at the company, and many staff expect further rounds of layoffs; WeWork declined to comment on the news.
- Executives at WeWork are weighing two financial rescue packagesâone led by its biggest shareholder, SoftBank, and one led by JPMorgan Chaseâas the company scrambles for cash following its failed IPO, according to the Wall Street Journal.
- While the first bailout proposal would effectively give control of the business to Masayoshi Sonâs SoftBank, board members reportedly favor the second option, a multibillion-dollar debt financing plan led by JPMorgan.
- Whatâs more, WeWork is also removing 1,600 in-office phone booths from some of its U.S. and Canada locations after tests came back positive for elevated levels of formaldehyde, according to a company email to tenants obtained by Forbes on Monday.
- WeWork is still opening new locations faster than ever, despite concerns about its cash-burn, CNBC reported; the company will run out of money by the second quarter of 2020 if its current trajectory doesnât change, according to AllianceBernstein research.
Key background: The bad news havenât let up for WeWork, which over the last month has imploded as it canceled its highly anticipated IPO and ousted CEO and founder Adam Neumann. The companyâs new leadership has been selling off the companyâs assetsâincluding Neumannâs famed $60 million private jetâto cut costs and raise cash.
Tangent: WeWorkâs founder and former CEO, Adam Neumann, lost his billionaire status as the company unraveled and he was sidelined, Forbes has reported. From a $4.1 billion net worth earlier this year, he is now down to no more than $600 million.
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Topline: WeWorkâs troubles look far from over, with massive layoffs, a fiasco with its phone booths and a tough choice between two financial bailout plans as the company scrambles to raise cash and save its business.
- WeWork is expected to lay off at least 2,000 peopleâaround 13% of its staffâas early as this week, the Guardian first reported.
- Employees described a âtoxicâ atmosphere, with little getting done at the company, and many staff expect further rounds of layoffs; WeWork declined to comment on the news.
- Executives at WeWork are weighing two financial rescue packagesâone led by its biggest shareholder, SoftBank, and one led by JPMorgan Chaseâas the company scrambles for cash following its failed IPO, according to the Wall Street Journal.
- While the first bailout proposal would effectively give control of the business to Masayoshi Sonâs SoftBank, board members reportedly favor the second option, a multibillion-dollar debt financing plan led by JPMorgan.
- Whatâs more, WeWork is also removing 1,600 in-office phone booths from some of its U.S. and Canada locations after tests came back positive for elevated levels of formaldehyde, according to a company email to tenants obtained by Forbes on Monday.
- WeWork is still opening new locations faster than ever, despite concerns about its cash-burn, CNBC reported; the company will run out of money by the second quarter of 2020 if its current trajectory doesnât change, according to AllianceBernstein research.
Key background: The bad news havenât let up for WeWork, which over the last month has imploded as it canceled its highly anticipated IPO and ousted CEO and founder Adam Neumann. The companyâs new leadership has been selling off the companyâs assetsâincluding Neumannâs famed $60 million private jetâto cut costs and raise cash.
Tangent: WeWorkâs founder and former CEO, Adam Neumann, lost his billionaire status as the company unraveled and he was sidelined, Forbes has reported. From a $4.1 billion net worth earlier this year, he is now down to no more than $600 million.