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Report: WeWork Delaying Mass Layoffs Because It Can't Afford Severance – Gizmodo, Gizmodo.com

Report: WeWork Delaying Mass Layoffs Because It Can't Afford Severance – Gizmodo, Gizmodo.com


Photo: Mark Lennihan (AP)

WeWork, the company that is either a transformative way of life or adangerously overleveragedreal estate company posing as acultish tech firm, is planning on laying off thousands of employees.

… Just as soon as it can scrape up the cash for severance costs, anyhow.

Earlier on Monday,reports indicatedthat WeWork investor SoftBank was preparing a $ 5 billion bailout package that may give it 70 percent or higher control of the company at a valuation of $ 8 billion, a catastrophic fall from WeWork’s prior claims to bewor th $ (billion) ***************************. (As of just a few weeks ago, WeWork was still hoping for a valuation in the$ (billion range).) Business Insiderlater reportedthat staff received emails indicating there will soon be layoffs at the company; according to another report from theWall Street Journal, sources say that thousands of people are slated to lose jobs but that the decision had been delayed because WeWork has only “weeks” of money left and can’t afford to pay severance. The paper noted that SoftBank’s offer would cover buying “more than $ 1 billion of stock from existing investors and employees.”

In other words, WeWork is so broke that it needs to raise additional funds to fire people. As the Journal’s Liz Hoffmannoted on Twitter, if the bailout package goes through, that will put SoftBank in the … unique position of having invested $ 10 billion and lent another $ 5 billion to a company it now values ​​at $ 8 billion. If areport on Axiosis to be believed, around $ 200 million of that will be an exit package designed to wrest control of voting shares held by former CEO Adam Neumann, who stepped down amid claims of bizarre behavior and a cloud of suspicion overquestionable financial a Rrangements

AsCNBC reported, SoftBank isn’t the only one feeling the WeWork pain. Investor JPMorgan Chase, which was slated to rake in millions in fees for an advisory role in WeWork’s IPO and a financier role raising a $ 6 billion credit facility, could instead “collect nothing for months of work, along with potential hefty losses on its exiting equity and debt investments ”if the competing SoftBank bailout goes through.

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