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WeWork Doesn’t Work

Published 17/09/2019, 11:25
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It would appear that WeWork has missed the boat when it comes to getting investors to buy into an idea that has yet to prove profitable.

Today’s decision to defer the launch of its much anticipated IPO appears to be borne out of concern that its valuation is still way too high, as well as concern over its governance structure, and the financial linkages with its CEO Adam Neumann.

Earlier this month the company announced that it would be looking at a much lower valuation of between $20bn to $25bn in a move that would inflict huge losses on a number of its major investors, particularly Softbank which earlier this year bought a further $2bn of shares, valuing the company at an eye watering $47bn.

Looking back now this extra cash injection was an extraordinary decision for a business whose primary revenue earner is in the rental of shared office space which allows small businesses to make the use of office space at a lower rate than your usual real estate business model.

In essence what it does is it buys unused office space and then rents it out into smaller units to start-ups or small businesses, for a much lower cost, than would traditionally be charged by a normal landlord.

The company offers several pricing options to larger businesses, as well as individual workers but all the while with a view to providing the benefits of a full office environment while reducing the costs for businesses, where margins tend to be wafer thin.

It is certainly true that the shared office space business model is a successful one, given that Workspace Group and IWG here in the UK have both seen significant growth in the last ten years, but to argue that it is a multibillion dollar business is stretching credibility to its limits.

In terms of valuation Workspace Group and IWG are much more modest at £1.7bn, and £3.5bn respectively, and more importantly both companies are profitable.

The WeWork or the We Company as it is now known has more grand ambitions, however today’s setback could mean that they have to temper these.

The S1 filing issued last month should have been the opening salvo that began a roadshow that would convince investors to generate between $2bn to $3bn of extra funding, at a time when the IPO flurry that we saw at the beginning of this year appears to have run its course.

The reality has been somewhat different and while other unicorns like Uber (NYSE:UBER), Lyft (NASDAQ:LYFT) and Slack appear to have been given the benefit of the doubt it would appear that as far as WeWork is considered investors have decided it doesn’t work.

With the company losing $2 for every $1 it makes, even a valuation as low as $15bn and $18bn hasn’t been enough to whet investor appetite, particularly since a number of this year’s unicorns are now languishing below their IPO launch prices.

As Uber (NYSE:UBER) can attest a popular business model doesn’t always translate into a realistic valuation and looking at WeWork’s numbers it is hard to make a case for the type of valuation being asked for now, let alone the one we saw at the beginning of the year.

On the numbers in the six months to the end of June the company generated revenue of $1.54bn, almost double over the same period a year ago. So far so good, unfortunately its operating expenses were $2.9bn, which saw its operating losses rise to $1.37bn.

There is no question that every business requires capital in order to grow the business, however in the space of the last few years operating expenses have shown no signs of coming down, with last year the company making a pre-tax loss of $1.93bn. This year alone the company is down just under $900m and in terms of cash flow the company burns through cash as quickly as it generates it.

In terms of the growth numbers, workstation capacity has doubled to 604k, while memberships were up 97% to 527k.

When the S-1 was originally filed at the end of last month there was no indication as to what price the company was looking to price its IPO, but it was pretty clear that they wouldn’t get the $47bn that Softbank paid in January this year, with initial estimates coming in at a more modest $25bn.

Even that proved to be a little too rich for a lot of investors and now it looks like its struggling to get people to bite at a $15bn valuation which suggests that for all the talk of a delay until October, it could well be a lot longer before the IPO becomes a reality, if it happens at all.

While a $15bn valuation seems on the low side when compared to the numbers that were being talked about in January, it’s hard to escape the feeling that even at $15bn the valuation is still way too high, begging the question, what was Softbank thinking?

At this rate they’ll be struggling to give the shares away.

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