A sign for WeWork is displayed at their office in Manhattan, Aug. 9, 2023. AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey, File
Trading in shares ofย WeWorkย were halted Monday as rumors swirl that the office sharing company, once valued as high as $47 billion, will seek bankruptcy protection.
Last week,ย The Wall Street Journal and other media outlets reported that WeWork was planning to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection as early as this week โ citing unnamed sources familiar with the matter.
A WeWork spokesperson said last week that the company does not comment on speculation and did not immediately return messages after trading in the companyโs stock was halted Monday.
Shares of WeWork, which cost more than $400 two years ago, could be had Monday for less than $1.
The specter of bankruptcy has hovered over WeWork for some time. In August, the New York companyย sounded the alarmย over its ability to remain in business. But cracks had begun to emerge several years ago.
WeWork is paying the price for aggressive expansion in its early years. The companyย went publicย in October 2021 after its first attempt to do so two years earlier collapsed spectacularly. The debacle led to theย ouster of founder and CEOย Adam Neumann, whose erratic behavior and exorbitant spending spooked early investors.
Japanโs SoftBank stepped in toย keep WeWork afloat, acquiring majority control over the company.
Despite efforts to turn the company around since Neumannโs departure โ including significant cuts to operating costs and rising revenue โ WeWork has struggled in a commercial real estate market that has been rocked by the rising costs of borrowing money, as well as a shifting dynamic for millions of office workers now checking into their offices remotely.
In September, when WeWork announced plans toย renegotiate nearly all of its leases, CEO David Tolley noted that the companyโs lease liabilities accounted for more than two-thirds of its operating expenses for the second quarter…
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