Years after Going Public via SPAC. Office Landlords, CMBS Holders Face the Music, Stockholders Wiped Out
Spent its entire life burning $13.8 billion of investor cash. Landlords got free manna from heaven and can’t complain. A good scheme while it lasted for everyone but investors.
WeWork has finally filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in New Jersey Federal court after it had spent its entire life burning huge amounts of cash raised from investors – a total of $13.8 billion raised in 22 rounds, much of it from SoftBank and SoftBank’s Vision fund, and after more recently stiffing office landlords left and right.
The title of its press release about the bankruptcy filing is a typical WeWork hoot; even in bankruptcy, it could not let go of the ridiculous hype-and-hoopla show:
“WeWork Takes Strategic Action to Significantly Strengthen Balance Sheet and Further Streamline Real Estate Footprint.”
The title was also an indication of what’s in for office landlords and holders of Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS). During the bygone era when companies were hogging office space that they thought they might grow into, WeWork created huge demand for office space, contributing to the notion of the office shortage that caused more hogging of office space.
https://wolfstreet.com/2023/11/07/wework-finally-files-for-bankruptcy-2-years-after-going-public-via-spac-office-landlords-cmbs-holders-face-music-stockholders-wiped-out/