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Even WeWork is going public thanks to SPACs

The troubled co-working company, now valued at $9 billion, is riding the SPAC boom to the public markets.

A WeWork sign on the side of a brick building in Dublin.
A WeWork sign on the side of a brick building in Dublin.
A year and a half after its failed IPO and a major drop in valuation, WeWork is going public.
Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Rani Molla
Rani Molla was a senior correspondent at Vox and has been focusing her reporting on the future of work. She has covered business and technology for more than a decade — often in charts — including at Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal.

A year and a half after its failed IPO attempt, WeWork is finally going public. Instead of trying a traditional IPO again, the troubled coworking outfit is using a different financial maneuver: merging with a special purpose acquisition company, known as a SPAC. The deal, which values WeWork at $9 billion including debt, represents a bit of closure for a company that has had a roller coaster few years, going from a tech darling valued at $47 billion to a cautionary tale. It also highlights just how frenzied the SPAC rush has become.

The Wall Street Journal first confirmed on Friday that the company is merging with BowX Acquisition, sponsored by SPAC Bow Capital Management and run by Sacramento Kings owner and Tibco Software founder Vivek Ranadivé. In a way, WeWork is the quintessential SPAC candidate: It’s a high-profile company that has had difficulty going public otherwise. It’s also operating in the buzzy coworking industry: WeWork essentially leases office real estate, makes it look cool, and then subleases that property to companies and individuals looking to rent for the short term.

There are mixed signals for the company’s financial outlook. On one hand, WeWork and other shared office space companies could thrive post-pandemic as businesses rethink their traditional office leases and opt for more flexible solutions. On the other, WeWork posted a loss of nearly $4 billion last year and about the same in 2019. BowX Acquisition is currently trading at $10.72 — more than the standard $10 that SPACs go public at and a sign that this could be a popular acquisition. However, it had traded below $10 earlier when the WeWork merger had already been speculated.

Related

SPAC mergers, like the one between WeWork and BowX Acquisition, are an increasingly popular way for companies to go public. This year is on track for a record number of SPAC companies listing on the stock market. The Journal reported that nearly 300 SPACs have gone public so far in 2021, raising $93 billion. In most years, that’s more than the annual total for IPOs, both traditional and SPAC. Just this morning, the Wall Street Journal also reported that media startups Axios and the Athletic are hoping to merge and go public via a SPAC.

Wait, what are SPACs again?

SPACs are shell companies that go public with the express purpose of raising money to buy private companies — effectively bringing private companies public much faster than if they were to do a traditional IPO.

To be successful, a SPAC needs to merge with a private company within two years or return investors’ money. A share of a SPAC typically costs $10, and buyers are allowed to get their money back if they don’t like the eventual merger. That means they are a relatively safe investment if people buy them around that price. However, a slew of recent SPACs traded much higher. The SPAC that purchased electric car company Lucid traded higher than $60 before announcing the merger, after which the price precipitously declined.

And SPACs have seen increased demand because of an influx of retail investors — regular people investing in companies through apps like Robinhood. While this trend democratizes access to the stock market, critics say it’s also democratizing the ability to lose lots of money. Post-merger SPACs have historically underperformed regular IPO stocks. An index of SPACs, which reached a peak in February, has seen a selloff in recent days in anticipation of more scrutiny by the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

The flurry of SPACs — many of them led by high-profile sponsors and even celebrities —means there’s lots of money out there with which to merge with private companies — more perhaps than there are good companies to buy.

As University of Florida professor and IPO expert Jay Ritter told Recode recently, “There’s now so much money chasing deals, it’s going to be harder and harder to pull off attractive mergers.”

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