WeWork, a struggling co-working room service, says it expects to go bankrupt by the end of May, touting lease-restructuring work that it think does save$ 8 billion in upcoming hire savings.
WeWork has been making real estate costs less expensive since the New York-based business filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in November. WeWork attempted to restructure nearly all of its contracts at the time, reporting that hire liabilities accounted for about two-thirds of its operating expenses.
In an upgrade Tuesday, WeWork said it had “determined a final course ahead” at 90 percent of the bank’s about 500 wholly owned areas in its worldwide real estate portfolio, including through agreements to update or accept leases….
Trending
- Thai authorities detain 68 Montagnards during raid on funeral service
- 20 TTP terrorists, including a Sikh man, arrested in Pakistan’s Punjab
- UN abruptly cancels Uyghur scholar’s speech at Paris language forum
- Oscars aims to be politics-free with ‘apolitical’ host Conan O’Brien
- Elon Musk welcomes 14th child, Seldon Lycurgus, his fourth with Shivon Zilis
- Iowa becomes first US state to remove gender identity protections under Donald Trump’s administration
- Vivek Ramaswamy called ‘anti-American’ for giving barefoot interview in own home
- From ‘great guy’ to ‘disrespectful’: How Trump-Zelenskyy talks went up in flames