WeWork to lay off 2,400 employees in SoftBank revamp
Send a link to a friend
[November 22, 2019] By
Sheila Dang, Carrie Monahan and Joshua Franklin
NEW YORK (Reuters) - WeWork said on
Thursday it is laying off around 2,400 employees, almost 20% of its
workforce, as the office-sharing company seeks to drastically cut costs
after it transformed from a Wall Street darling into a pariah in a
matter of weeks.
The long-anticipated layoffs are the biggest move yet by Japanese
technology conglomerate SoftBank Group Corp, which is providing a $9.5
billion lifeline and will soon own about 80 percent of WeWork's shares,
to refocus the company on its core business.
Under co-founder and ex-CEO Adam Neumann, WeWork had become bloated and
was diversifying into all kinds of areas - including setting up a school
and running apartment buildings - without any clear route to
profitability.
"As part of our renewed focus on the core WeWork business, and as we
have previously shared with employees, the company is making necessary
layoffs to create a more efficient organization," a company spokeswoman
said in a statement.
The job cuts are the latest sign of how much WeWork's prospects have
deteriorated - from being worth $47 billion in January and planning in
September an initial public offering (IPO), to a company facing a cash
crunch and fighting for survival.
It shelved plans for the IPO on Sept. 30, a week after Neumann resigned
as CEO.
The layoffs began weeks ago overseas and continued this week in the
United States, WeWork said.
"This workforce reduction affects approximately 2,400 employees
globally, who will receive severance, continued benefits, and other
forms of assistance to aid in their career transition," New York-based
WeWork added.
The company had 12,500 employees on June 30, and there are others who
work for affiliates.
Staff in New York who were let go were offered six months severance if
they had been with the company for at least four years, and four months
severance for anything below that, one ex-employee said.
Some employees who were laid off on Thursday laughed and took selfies as
they exited the building. "I'm feeling relieved, it's been a stressful
time," a former employee said.
The layoffs come even as WeWork considers a change in CEO to replace
current Co-CEOs Artie Minson and Sebastian Gunningham, who themselves
have only been in place since September.
The groups affected by the layoffs include WeWork's architecture unit,
which has helped curate WeWork's distinctive shared office spaces known
for their modern design, and its technology department, among which are
coding and software teams, according to people familiar with the matter.
[to top of second column] |
A sign is seen in a window at the WeWork corporate headquarters in
Manhattan, New York, U.S., November 21, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Segar
Job losses in the technology department further undercut WeWork's central claim
that it is primarily a technology company, not just a real estate firm, and
therefore merits a much higher valuation.
The perception that it was a technology company was central to the company
attaining valuations in the tens of billions of dollars.
In the aftermath of the announcement, WeWork's junk bond due in 2025 fell 1.125
cents on the dollar, sending its yield back to near a record high above 16%.
Its spread over Treasury bonds, a measure of the additional premium investors
demand for owning its risky debt rather than safer government securities,
widened by 0.36 percentage point to 14.46 points. Before WeWork launched its
failed IPO effort, the bond's spread was less than half that.
MOUNTING LOSSES
WeWork is still facing a litany of issues, the latest being an investigation by
the New York State Attorney General.
The company's losses are also continuing to mount, swelling to $1.25 billion in
the third quarter, and it is burning through cash as it has committed to a big
expansion in the number of sites.
As part of the restructuring, it is closing or selling peripheral businesses
that it set up, including its private elementary school after the current school
year.
A WeWork employee, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said on Wednesday
that some employees at its residential living business, WeLive, had been told
Thursday would be their last day.
Some WeWork employees have banded together into the WeWorkers Coalition, which
is calling for severance pay and compensation for lost equity for laid-off
employees.
Alan Friedman, a WeWork software engineer who helped start the WeWorkers
Coalition two weeks ago, described the long wait for the layoffs announcement,
which has been widely discussed in the media for weeks, to be "draining" for
staff morale.
(Reporting by Sheila Dang, Carrie Monahan and Joshua FranklinAdditional
reporting by Dan Burns in New YorkEditing by Marguerita Choy, Nick Zieminski and
Cynthia Osterman)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |