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Opinion: WeWork’s Bankruptcy – triggering the downturn?

One quick glance at WeWork’s busy StockTwits reveals that when the stock pumpers pump they still manage to catch needy retail investors despite much of the asset management community seeing this business tumbling as early as March this year. But what almost no one is reporting on is just how deep the formally long arms of WeWork actually go into major commercial real estate hubs like the West End and City of London. So just what could happen?

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For those of you who need a refresh here’s the lowdown. A guy called Masayoshi San got a bit blindsided by a padawan called Adam Neumann who you might remember from pretty much any business news paper across the whole of 2019, as a charismatic sales guy with a swoosh of shoulder length black hair and a penchant for non-core assets who had a dream much like this inspirational but otherwise totally impractical picture to the left. After the Neumann fiasco, WeWork briefly flourished in the pre-pandemic period but petered out once managers realised that free beer wasn’t conducive to work and that everyone who went to a WeWork thought the week started and ended on a single day – Thursday.

In short, the stock plunged because there is no point paying for an expensive office when you only need it one day a week and that bombshell basically shattered the myth that $47b valuations  mean a lot when you get off the Street.

Office Space

Dimensional’s global Real Estate ETF reveals that office REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts) barely make it to the midpoint allocations and in some of the other products it’s even worse and when those guys aren’t keen it probably means the data and research doesn’t shape up. It’s suffering a few setbacks lately due to a well publicised debt wall that it is facing alongside the higher interest rates which are currently sufficient to put off even family offices from entering the market when the cost off financing remains higher than returns. This is a situation Inconomics will cover in more detail in future reports.

 

In short, office is a space for the lower risk investor in it for the long term or the quality driven opportunistic outfits like IPUT.

WeWork By Cars Life Blog

No imagine, a world where there is a major league tenant and this has a global presence that consumes core grade A office space like it’s really hungry for apples and has a swagger about it that causes procurement teams to have reoccurring nightmares. This tenant is everywhere one minute and then suddenly not. What happens next?

Well things start to get a bit wobbly for a lot of people.





Wework by Sargent Seal



Leveraged Up For A Down Turn?

You’d probably be surprised just what is acquired with debt. Or then again maybe not. Cheap debt has made the world go around for a while now but there is a rush on to refinance these huge loans on terms that don’t destroy everything. Well, this is the science part because in reality this debt wall is going to be a problem for many asset managers and many investors because so many of these assets are on the books because the search for yield took investors to places where they might not have gone without the availability of cheap debt from mainstream sources. High grade tenants are sought after because they are deemed likely to be able to survive uncertainty, terms are generous, changes to the fabric of buildings, that might never have been allowed to some average not for profit, happen without much concern for the wider asset.

In WeWork’s case this is something that could be happening globally impacting on entire portfolios that sat liquid in 2022 but are now breaching the risk strategies of most investors. WeWork tended to have the best spots, in the best areas, of the best cities and according to Bloomberg there are 777 across 39 countries. This isn’t Silicon Valley Bank with a limited scope easily scoped up by the FDIC but a global issue which is likely to cause significant damage to an already uncertain office space market and it won’t just be rental that will suffer – how much will demand for previous occupied core and premium space drop when the market is flooded with space that WeWork were the only ones who could afford not to afford it.

 

This goes deeper than the headlines folks and it’s our predication that WeWork may be the final straw and thus keeps rates higher for longer as the FOMC seek this soft landing.

Takeaways:

– This goes deeper than the headlines folks and it’s our predication that WeWork may be the final straw,  keeping rates higher for longer as the FOMC seek this soft landing amid the latest news from the Jobs Report.
– Greening/sustainability works could take place whilst the building is empty and could be pre-let to tenants seeking greater sustainability.
– Likely to deepen the impact of the impending debt wall crisis.
– Could bring down functioning businesses as well as reveal any zombies.
– Watch out for REITs, asset managers and holders of core plus assets as the market could completely fall away.
– Potentially avoid CRE developers until this is over.