I find this story pretty "funny".
This company (WeWork) was about to go public in an IPO (valued at $40-60 billion just a few months ago).
When the company discloses the recent losses, the interest from new stock investors is poor so they pull the IPO.
Now just weeks after the cancelled IPO, the company needs an infusion of cash just to keep operating.
Largest investors (Softbank & JPM) didn't want to see the "haircut" on their investment so pulled the IPO and now practically "begging" investors to save the company the way I see it.
The founder & CEO was fired recently & also sold several hundred million dollars worth of his stock just months ago. "Writing-on-the-wall" signs?
Pretty "greedy" IMO that they (Softbank & JPM) didn't just IPO the company at the lower valuation so they would have received the money they obviously needed. Take the "haircut" now to save the company in the hopes of recovering the losses in the long-term.
So they thought the IPO wouldn't fairly value the company yet they're not willing to put more of their own money into the company to keep it afloat?
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/16/sof...-wework-bailout-proposals-in-coming-days.html
This company (WeWork) was about to go public in an IPO (valued at $40-60 billion just a few months ago).
When the company discloses the recent losses, the interest from new stock investors is poor so they pull the IPO.
Now just weeks after the cancelled IPO, the company needs an infusion of cash just to keep operating.
Largest investors (Softbank & JPM) didn't want to see the "haircut" on their investment so pulled the IPO and now practically "begging" investors to save the company the way I see it.
The founder & CEO was fired recently & also sold several hundred million dollars worth of his stock just months ago. "Writing-on-the-wall" signs?
Pretty "greedy" IMO that they (Softbank & JPM) didn't just IPO the company at the lower valuation so they would have received the money they obviously needed. Take the "haircut" now to save the company in the hopes of recovering the losses in the long-term.
So they thought the IPO wouldn't fairly value the company yet they're not willing to put more of their own money into the company to keep it afloat?
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/16/sof...-wework-bailout-proposals-in-coming-days.html
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