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Page 5 of 14
Former WeWork CEO Adam Neumann
FinanceThe fall of WeWork was a jolt to venture capital—how that could change VC investing
By Anne SradersJanuary 22, 2020
Women + The Power of Community, with Audrey Gelman - 2018 SXSW Conference and Festivals
MPWExclusive: GV buys out WeWork’s stake in The Wing
By Emma HinchliffeJanuary 22, 2020
Miguel McKelvey-WeWork
FinanceWeWork’s other cofounder has a plan to save the company. It’s the opposite of what Adam Neumann envisioned.
By Polina MarinovaJanuary 22, 2020
NEW YORK, NY - NOVEMBER 21: WeWork offices located at 349 5th Ave on November 21, 2019 in New York City. WeWork has laid off 2,400 employees as it works to cut costs in its attempts to right-size the business. In a statement, a WeWork spokesperson said the cuts were being made as part of the companys efforts to create a more efficient organization and refocus on the core office-sharing business. (Photo by David Dee Delgado/Getty Images)
Real EstateWeWork Is Hitting the Brakes in New York and London
By Jack Sidders and BloombergJanuary 9, 2020
US-IT-lifestyle-transport-labor-Uber
FinanceThe Decade in IPOs: What These 6 Offerings Tell Us About Going Public in the 2010s
By Kevin KelleherDecember 21, 2019
Adam Neumann, founder of WeWork, speaks on stage at the WeWork San Francisco Creator Awards at Palace of Fine Arts on May 10, 2018 in San Francisco, California.
NewslettersParsing the WeWork Debacle
By David Meyer and Alan MurrayDecember 16, 2019
Jack Ma, former chairman of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., right, gestures while speaking with Masayoshi Son, chairman and chief executive officer of SoftBank Group Corp., at Tokyo Forum 2019 in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, Dec. 6, 2019. Son unveiled a $184 million initiative Friday to accelerate artificial intelligence research in Japan, enlisting Ma to expound on his goal of commercializing the technology. Son's company announced a partnership with the University of Tokyo that includes spending 20 billion yen ($184 million) over 10 years by mobile arm SoftBank Corp. to establish the Beyond AI Institute. Photographer: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg via Getty Images
FinanceSoftBank’s WeWork and Uber Stumbles Could Push Masayoshi Son to Sell Part of His Massive Alibaba Stake
By Kurt Schussler, Pavel Alpeyev and BloombergDecember 10, 2019
US-COMPUTERS-STOCK-SLACK
FinanceThe Death of the Tech Unicorn Has Been Greatly Exaggerated, According to Goldman’s Top Tech Banker
By Rey MashayekhiNovember 26, 2019
ConferencesWhy SoftBank Is Investing in Brazil, and Why Nobody There Seems to Care About WeWork
By Michal Lev-RamNovember 19, 2019
FinanceWeWork’s Legal Floodgates May Have Just Opened
By Rey MashayekhiNovember 19, 2019
FinanceThe Pain From WeWork’s Failed IPO Deepens as Bondholders Get Stuck Underwater
By Erik ShermanNovember 12, 2019
t-mobile ceo john legere
TechWhy It’s Not So Crazy for T-Mobile CEO John Legere to Run WeWork
By Aaron PressmanNovember 11, 2019
FinanceWeWork Is Divesting Businesses Including Meetup and Its Stake in The Wing
By Ellen Huet and BloombergNovember 8, 2019
FinanceSoftBank Group Writes Down $9.2 Billion on WeWork—and That’s Only the Beginning of the Bad News
By Erik ShermanNovember 6, 2019
Masayoshi Son, chairman and chief executive officer of SoftBank Group Corp., speaks during a news conference in Tokyo, Japan, on Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2019. The Japanese investment powerhouse reported its first quarterly operating loss in 14 years -- about $6.5 billion --after finally disclosing the damage from its bets on WeWork and Uber Technologies Inc. Photographer: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg via Getty Images
FinanceSoftBank Notches a $6.5 Billion Loss on Plunging WeWork and Uber Valuations
By Pavel Alpeyev and BloombergNovember 6, 2019
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