Thanks to SoftBank, WeWork's cofounder, Adam Neumann, is now $1.7B richer. As an entrepreneur, this is a great personal story for him and his family, and perhaps inspirational to other entrepreneurs. But what about WeWork's employees? Doesn't what's happening to those employees undermine the excitement of working for a startup?
Aside from the fact that thousands are slated to be laid off, the equity compensation of employees has virtually been wiped out. Briefly, this is what I know per my review of the news:
In January 2019 WeWork's vaulting valuation was $47B. As of this week, that valuation has plummeted to $8B. Based on this week's deal, SoftBank now owns 80% of WeWork, which means that most WeWork's employees' stock options are now underwater (at $20-a-share according to WSJ).
So some of the winners here are Mr. Neumann, SoftBank and some early investors such as JPM's asset management division and VCs such as Benchmark Capital.
If anyone has more details about the winners and losers of WeWork's deal, please share.
It's not really on topic, but it's a warning message to the youngest employees of startups, if you see a fire, you can be pretty much sure it's gonna turn into a big flame that's gonna end up hurting you one way or another. At that point, you really have to think if it's not better to change a job.