The Phnom Penh Post

SoftBank to bail out WeWork for $9.5B

- Sara Hussein

JAPAN-BASED SoftBank Group confirmed on Wednesday it will pump billions of dollars into struggling start-up WeWork in a deal that ups its stake in the office-sharing firm to around 80 per cent.

The package, which involves new financing, speeding up already pledged money and a new tender offer for existing shareholde­rs, is worth a total of $9.5 billion.

It will see co-founder Adam Neumann, who has already been forced to step down as CEO, exit the board for an “observer” role.

SoftBank Group’s Marcelo Claure will take over as executive chairman of the board.

The agreement caps a turbulent period for the oncevaunte­d start-up, which was valued by some at around $47 billion at the start of the year, and represents a significan­t shot in the arm as the company haemorrhag­es money.

“SoftBank has decided to double down on the company by providing a significan­t capital infusion and operationa­l support,” SoftBank chairman Masayoshi Son said in a statement.

“The new capita l SoftBank is prov iding will restore momentum to the company and I am committed to delivering profitabil­it y and positive free cash flow,” added Claure in t he statement.

The package includes $5 billion in new financing, as well as a commitment to speed up an existing pledge of $1.5 billion.

SoftBank will also launch a tender offer of up to $3 billion for existing shareholde­rs, at $19.19 per share, expected to start in the fourth quarter of this year.

Eighty per cent stake

SoftBank, which already held 29 per cent of WeWork, will increase its stake to “approximat­ely 80 per cent”, but said this did not constitute taking control.

It said it would not hold a majority of voting rights at any general stockholde­r meeting or board of directors meeting and “does not control the company”.

“WeWork will not be a subsidiary of SoftBank. WeWork will be an associate of SoftBank,” the statement said.

The plan provides muchneeded funds for the troubled company, which sources have said must raise at least $3 billion to cover its financing needs through the end of the year.

A source told AFP the deal will give Neumann $1 billion for his SoftBank shares, $500 million for reimbursem­ents of personal debts and $185 million in consulting fees.

He will also maintain a small stake in the company, the source added.

The deal follows months of tumult for WeWork, which has gone from star status as one of the world most highly rated start-ups to a case study in overvaluat­ion for some analysts.

‘Loss-making unicorns’

Neumann stepped down as CEO last month amid questions over perceived selfdealin­g between his personal assets and WeWork, and over unconventi­onal personal conduct, including drug use.

Late last month, the firm cancelled a plan to launch an initial public offering (IPO) amid questions over its longterm profitabil­ity prospects.

“Hopefully, this marks the beginning of the end of using IPOs on hyped-up loss-making unicorns as a profit-taking opportunit­y before the music stops,” wrote Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst for AsiaPacifi­c at Oanda, in a note.

Radio Free Mobile founder Richard Windsor said WeWork amounts to a “searing indictment of Softbank’s valuation and screening methodolog­y which needs to shift towards being based on fundamenta­ls rather than blue sky”.

WeWork, which launched in 2010, has touted its model as revolution­ising commercial real estate by offering shared, flexible workspace arrangemen­ts, and has operations in 111 cities in 29 countries.

In some cities, it is one of the major landlords, but its model of offering flexible, short-term leases is viewed by some as less of a selling point and more of a liability for investors.

The saga has been a cloud hanging over SoftBank’s Son, but he has remained steadfastl­y committed to the firm, insisting its challenges are surmountab­le.

“It is not unusual for the world’s leading technology disruptors to experience growth challenges as the one WeWork just faced,” Son said in the SoftBank statement on Wednesday.

“We remain committed to WeWork, its employees, its member customers and landlords.”

 ?? TIMOTHY A CLARY/AFP ?? Japan-based SoftBank will take control of WeWork in a bailout plan that will see the office-sharing start-up’s co-founder Adam Neumann exit the board.
TIMOTHY A CLARY/AFP Japan-based SoftBank will take control of WeWork in a bailout plan that will see the office-sharing start-up’s co-founder Adam Neumann exit the board.

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