Business Day

SoftBank deal rescues WeWork

Japanese conglomera­te will treat start-up as an associate, not a subsidiary, so it can protect its balance sheet

- Agency Staff Tokyo/New York/San Francisco

WeWork has accepted a rescue package from Japan’s SoftBank Group, its largest investor, which will give the group an 80% stake in the company. The deal marks the end of an era for the troubled co-working giant, which raised money at a $47bn valuation in January, pulled out of a botched initial public offering attempt in September and is now valued at less than $8bn in the bailout.

WeWork has accepted a rescue package from SoftBank Group, its largest investor, which will give the Japanese conglomera­te an 80% stake in the company.

The deal marks the end of an era for the troubled co-working giant, which raised money at a $47bn valuation in January, pulled out of a botched initial public offering (IPO) attempt in September and is now valued at less than $8bn in the bailout.

WeWork founder Adam Neumann will leave the company’s board as part of the package, to be replaced by SoftBank executive and newly appointed executive chair Marcelo Claure. Neumann is set to walk away from the deal with as much as $1.2bn in WeWork stock, a $500m credit line from SoftBank and consulting fee of roughly $185m, people familiar with the matter have said.

Neumann will remain connected to the company as a board observer.

The deal with SoftBank, which includes $5bn in new financing and accelerati­on of a $1.5bn existing commitment, grants a reprieve to WeWork parent We Company, which was on track to run out of money as soon as November.

It has been racing to slash costs since it pulled its IPO paperwork in September.

“This is exactly the reason why people are suspicious about actual valuations of unicorn companies,” said Mitsushige Akino, an executive officer with Ichiyoshi Asset Management in

Tokyo. “There will be a lot of SoftBank investors that think it’s crazy to invest this much money into one company.”

The capital infusion does not give the Japanese conglomera­te a majority of voting rights and WeWork will be treated as an associate, not a subsidiary. That might allow SoftBank to wield influence at WeWork without having to show all of its liabilitie­s on the balance sheet.

SoftBank’s shares fell as much as 3.5% in Tokyo on Wednesday but pared its losses after the announceme­nt.

The SoftBank rescue was one of two options the WeWork board was considerin­g to keep the company afloat. The other was a $5bn debt package presented by JPMorgan Chase, which people familiar with the proposal said would have been one been of the riskiest junkdebt offerings in recent years, including $2bn of pay-in-kind bonds yielding 15%.

As part of the deal with SoftBank, the company will offer to buy as much as $3bn from existing shareholde­rs.

Neumann will be allowed to sell nearly $1bn of stock to SoftBank, an insider has said.

WeWork’s arc from being one of the world’s most highly valued start-ups, to surrenderi­ng much of the company in an emergency bailout is one of the most dramatic business disasters in recent memory.

As recently as September, the company appeared to be headed to the public markets.

But investors baulked at the unusual governance structure and rapid rate of spending. According to its IPO paperwork, WeWork lost $900m in the first half of this year alone.

The chilly public market reception prompted the company

A to oust Neumann as CEO last month and pull its IPO paperwork while it tried to find a way to profitabil­ity.

But making money may prove difficult.

The company considers only 30% of its office space to be “mature”, which typically means generating steady revenue.

It could face costs that approach $1bn to renovate new space it has already secured. Some leases and projects, including one plan for a 36storey lease in a Seattle tower, have been scuttled as the company has floundered.

The SoftBank deal paves the way for the Japanese conglomera­te to take a larger role at the troubled start-up. SoftBank asked Claure, the former CEO of Sprint, last month to look for ways to cut costs and raise revenue at WeWork.

After Neumann’s ouster, WeWork executives Sebastian Gunningham and Artie Minson were appointed as co-CEOs, with a similar mandate to refocus on the core business.

SoftBank had already committed more than $10bn to the start-up before the rescue package, and owns about one-third of the company. Its latest effort to shore up its troubled investment comes at a delicate time.

SoftBank is working to raise another, larger version of its $100bn Vision Fund, the huge tech fund that made bets in Silicon Valley so large that it changed the start-up ecosystem. SoftBank was also an investor in Uber Technologi­es, which is down by more than a quarter since its May IPO.

SoftBank’s losses from its recent investment­s could run into billions of dollars. Founder Masayoshi Son is likely to deal with the subject when the company reports quarterly earnings on November 6.

“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 statement. “Since the vision remains unchanged, SoftBank has decided to double down on the company by providing a significan­t capital infusion and operationa­l support.”

 ?? /AFP ?? Incentives: WeWork office in New York City. Adam Neumann, the office-sharing start-up’s founder, will leave the board but will get $1.2bn in stock, a $500m credit line and a consulting fee of $185m, according to an insider.
/AFP Incentives: WeWork office in New York City. Adam Neumann, the office-sharing start-up’s founder, will leave the board but will get $1.2bn in stock, a $500m credit line and a consulting fee of $185m, according to an insider.

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