> "SoftBank exec Marcelo Claure will be involved in the company's management, while former CEO Adam Neumann's stake will fall to low double digits...Since Neumann's departure last month, WeWork's been laser-focused on raising new capital. The company has been in talks with J.P. Morgan to discuss a debt financing.
> Fallout from the controversies and subsequent plummet in value has led to a tense relationship between former Neumann and SoftBank's [Masayoshi] Son, who has invested billions into the start-up. Neumann stepped down last month. It was also reported that SoftBank has readied a financing package to take control of the company and further sideline Neumann, who is also a co-founder."
Sounds like SoftBank's interested in eradicating references to Neumann.
Should Neumann be the focus of why WeWork faired so poorly? Or is he just the fall guy? I don't know, so if someone could enlighten me that would be great.
Neumann is definitely unconventional, but I don’t see how being a bit eccentric can lead to this. I’d put Musk and Thiel in the “weirdo techies” group along with Neumann, and both of their businesses are thriving.
SoftBank was just running a pump’n’dump; Pump up the company for an IPO, dump it on the market to realize the losses. Luckily, people are starting to catch on to these schemes from tech companies.
What I’m wondering is, what would we see if we analyzed Snapchat or Twitter with the same lense? Snapchat is basically dead now, yet it IPO’d at $24 billion. Once Trump is done, Twitter will die down too, and everyone will be left wondering, is this thing really worth $31 billion?
Well at least SoftBank is buying $1B in shares from employees and investors. The reality is that most employees were likely awarded shares at no more than a $20B valuation, so while it's going to lower they will at least get something.
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[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 35.6 ms ] thread> The deal values WeWork between $7.5 billion and $8 billion before the infusion, sources familiar with the matter say.
> Fallout from the controversies and subsequent plummet in value has led to a tense relationship between former Neumann and SoftBank's [Masayoshi] Son, who has invested billions into the start-up. Neumann stepped down last month. It was also reported that SoftBank has readied a financing package to take control of the company and further sideline Neumann, who is also a co-founder."
Sounds like SoftBank's interested in eradicating references to Neumann.
Should Neumann be the focus of why WeWork faired so poorly? Or is he just the fall guy? I don't know, so if someone could enlighten me that would be great.
SoftBank was just running a pump’n’dump; Pump up the company for an IPO, dump it on the market to realize the losses. Luckily, people are starting to catch on to these schemes from tech companies.
What I’m wondering is, what would we see if we analyzed Snapchat or Twitter with the same lense? Snapchat is basically dead now, yet it IPO’d at $24 billion. Once Trump is done, Twitter will die down too, and everyone will be left wondering, is this thing really worth $31 billion?
Twitter and Snapchat value doesn't come from their tech, but from their user base.
When you know those differences, you indeed might be better at picking horses.