
For December 2021, WeWork’s sales indicate that the company is seeing consistent growth due to increased demand for flexible offices.
For December 2021, WeWork’s sales indicate that the company is seeing consistent growth due to increased demand for flexible offices.
SoftBank has officially sold $550 million of its $2.2 billion rescue debt package that it provided WeWork over a year ago.
The agreement between WeWork and SoftBank resulted in an extension of $1.75 billion of total liquidity from February 2023 to February 2024.
On Wednesday, WeWork said it has to revise its Q3 financial statements after discovering that it misclassified some of its public shares.
The report revealed that the coworking giant is not only racking up big losses, but that the now-public company is “hemorrhaging cash.”
At day’s end last Thursday, WeWork shares closed 13.5% higher at $11.78 under the ticker “WE” on the New York Stock Exchange.
Last week, WeWork announced it will move forward with its planned IPO and will begin trading on Oct. 21 on the New York Stock Exchange.
The new arrangement will see JLL acting as an extension of WeWork’s in-house sales team in Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Denver, NYC, Phoenix, and San Francisco.
For WeWork, which has tried to find stability under its new chief executive, a SPAC may finally give the company the exit it always wanted.
WeWork shows no signs of slowing down in their quest to dominate the coworking and flexible workspace industry. What does their latest acquisition of Spacious mean…