What’s happening: Shares in the flexible office space provider are set to start trading on the New York Stock Exchange Thursday under the ticker “WE.”
But it’s a different deal, a different world — and a very different WeWork.
Then: Initially, WeWork pursued a traditional IPO. Bankers were expected to assign the company an eye-popping valuation. At its peak, private investors believed WeWork was worth $47 billion.
Now: Thursday’s listing follows a merger with BowX Acquisition Corp., a special-purpose acquisition company, or SPAC. The deal values WeWork at roughly $9 billion.
WeWork’s corporate governance also came under the microscope after it was revealed that co-founder and then-CEO Adam Neumann had amassed huge voting power, giving him extensive control over the company’s direction.
Yet the company is still losing money. Following the SPAC deal, which will raise $1.3 billion, Neumann will have voting power of about 11%.
Columbia Business School professor Len Sherman said that taking the SPAC route allows WeWork to avoid the scrutiny it drew in the past.
“The advantage of a SPAC offering is it allows WeWork the ability to make bullish forward-looking growth projections that would not be allowed under traditional IPO regulatory rules,” he told me.
Then: What’s Covid-19?
Now: The pandemic has dramatically changed the office space market as more people work from home.
“We think increased work from home decreases office demand by about 15%,” Daniel Ismail, lead analyst for Green Street’s office team, told me. “That’s a real paradigm shift.”
It’s not all bad news for WeWork, though. Ismail thinks companies want more flexible office agreements as workers trickle back, and will favor signing one- or two-year contracts with a firm like WeWork instead of locking in longer leases that span eight to 10 years.
He predicts that the flexible office market, which currently accounts for just 2% of total office inventory in the United States, could reach 10% by the end of the decade.
That said: Shares of IWG, which Ismail said is WeWork’s main publicly-traded competitor, are down 13% this year as uncertainties linger.
One more thing: Neumann is infamous now (he’ll be played by actor Jared Leto in an upcoming Apple TV+ series). But that’s not stopping him from celebrating WeWork’s delayed debut. The Financial Times reports that Neumann will host a party in New York on Thursday with early employees at the Standard Hotel.
What supply chain woes? Tesla posts a record quarter
The latest: The company reported another record quarter after US markets closed on Wednesday. Between July and September, it earned $1.6 billion in profit, a 389% increase over the same period last year.
Revenues rose 57% compared to 2020, even as the company earned less from selling regulatory credits to other carmakers, which use them to meet environmental standards and avoid large fines.
Analysts have warned that Tesla needs to become less reliant on that line of business, which is lucrative but expected to decline as competitors ramp up production of electric vehicles.
Still tough: The company warned that it’s experiencing difficulties obtaining computer chips and other materials, even if it was able to overcome those issues in the third quarter.
Tesla previously disclosed record sales in the period, up 20% compared to the previous three months and 73% from the year earlier.
“Due to part shortages and logistics variability, we have not been able to run our factories at full capacity,” Chief Financial Officer Zachary Kirkhorn told analysts. “It’s important to note that while we have roughly doubled deliveries year-to-date, this has been exceptionally difficult to achieve.”
Kirkhorn said customers are waiting longer for vehicles and backlogs are growing.
“The only practical way to address this in the immediate term is to do everything we can to build more cars on our existing production lines,” he said.
Investor insight: Shares are down more than 1% in premarket trading.
Pinterest stock soars on PayPal takeover chatter
The deal could be valued at $45 billion, making it the biggest technology deal of the year, Bloomberg reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter. Reuters and the Wall Street Journal have also reported PayPal’s interest, citing sources.
The thinking: PayPal is taking steps to become a “super app” in the vein of Alibaba’s Alipay and Tencent’s WeChat, which are huge in China. Last month, the company unveiled a new “all-in-one” interface featuring a high-yield savings account, a bill management system and new shopping tools that allow customers to earn rewards.
Pinterest has also been rolling out new features to make it easier to shop on its site and is trying to boost its offerings for advertisers.
“The potential deal would be a big swing for [PayPal], but we think [the Pinterest deal] makes sense within the context of [PayPal’s] broader commerce push,” Barclays analyst Ramsey El-Assal told clients.
Pinterest is known as a feel-good corner of the internet. But it doesn’t come without baggage. The company paid $22.5 million last year to settle a gender discrimination lawsuit brought by its former chief operating officer. It did not admit liability as part of the settlement.
Up next
Also today:
- Initial US jobless claims for last week post at 8:30 a.m. ET.
- Existing US home sales for September follow at 10 a.m. ET.