Orlando Sentinel

WeWork, customers want break

Economic hardships during pandemic are affecting rent payments

- By Peter Eavis

WeWork, the office space giant that was struggling before the coronaviru­s shut down much of the economy, is asking landlords for a break on its huge rent bill as it tries to survive the pandemic.

Some of the company’s small-business customers are also seeking rent relief. But they say WeWork has been unwilling to cut them much slack as they grapple with plunging revenues and stay-at-home orders that prevent them from using the company’s sleek spaces.

Klint Briney, who runs a marketing company in Los Angeles, was disappoint­ed that WeWork offered only to defer one month’s rent. Because much of his business comes from live events, his revenue is a small fraction of what it was a year ago.

“Something that was a legitimate offer, I certainly would have entertaine­d,” he said. “What they offered was a slap in the face.”

So, Briney is doing to WeWork what the company is doing to some of its landlords: He is not paying rent for April and May.

WeWork’s chief executive, Sandeep Mathrani, acknowledg­ed withholdin­g April and May rent payments to some of its landlords in an interview with CNBC last week.

Tension between WeWork, its landlords and its customers highlights the problems gripping the market for office space, a huge part of the economies of big cities. In the coming months, many tenants will be unable or unwilling to pay their rent. And landlords will have to decide whether to grant them relief, wait for them to make good on their arrears or seek to evict them. Banks and investors who lent money to property owners will face similar choices.

WeWork is a huge tenant and also has thousands of its own tenants. The company rents space to freelancer­s, startups, small businesses and large companies like Amazon. If it provided significan­t relief to its customers, it could help a crucial segment of the economy bear the costs of the pandemic and lockdowns.

But WeWork may not be in a position to be generous. The company nearly collapsed last year after investors balked at buying its shares in an initial public offering — and it is still burning through cash.

SoftBank, the Japanese conglomera­te that had fueled WeWork’s rapid growth, rescued the company and promised to keep plowing new money into the company. But SoftBank, which on Monday reported a $12.7 billion loss in the fiscal year that ended March 31, may no longer have the appetite to be WeWork’s financial savior. It has walked away from an offer to buy up to $3 billion of stock from existing shareholde­rs, including Adam Neumann, WeWork’s co-founder. That move allows SoftBank to withhold $1.1 billion of debt financing from the company.

WeWork may have advantages, including leverage to get better deals from property owners. The company occupies so much space that some building owners would be hard pressed to find other renters if WeWork left.

“We’ve paid our rent in over 80% of our locations in April and May,” Mathrani told CNBC. “We’re in discussion­s with our landlords in a friendly way, and we intend to make whole on our entire obligation.”

But WeWork’s reputation could suffer. Neumann and other executives have long argued that WeWork is far more than a provider of office space. Its locations, so the pitch went, offer customers a place to form supportive communitie­s that will promote entreprene­urship and give work meaning. That’s why some customers expected WeWork to cut or waive rents while they have been forbidden by local officials to go to offices.

 ?? TIMOTHY A. CLARY/GETTY-AFP ?? WeWork has deferred only one month’s rent to tenants during the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has wreaked havoc on the economy.
TIMOTHY A. CLARY/GETTY-AFP WeWork has deferred only one month’s rent to tenants during the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has wreaked havoc on the economy.

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