Market Recap
Markets skyrocketed Thursday on a better-than-expected CPI report, fueling speculation that the Fed might ease interest rate hikes. The Dow climbed over 1,000 points (+3.10%). The Nasdaq shot up over 6 percent with a 650 point rise. The S&P 500 (+4.59%) and Russell 2000 (+5.76%) were also in strong positive territory.
European markets also notched impressive gains: The DAX (Germany) closed up 3.50% and the FTSE (UK) was up over 1 percent.
In the crypto world, Bitcoin ($17,775) managed to rally back 4% after getting pummeled the past couple of days. Ethereum came back 12% to an underwhelming $1,320 per unit.
Crude Oil (WTI) rose $1.39 to $87.27 on a weakening U.S. Dollar after the CPI report.
Wework Exits 40 U.S. Locations After Tepid Forecast, Shares Slump
By Kannaki Deka
(Reuters) -WeWork Inc forecast fourth-quarter revenue below estimates and said it will exit about 40 underperforming U.S. locations, sending shares down over 15%, as the workspace provider deals with high expenses and a strong U.S. dollar.
The New York-based company, which offers workstations, private offices and customized floors, had enjoyed a pandemic-driven shift to flexible work outside traditional offices, but this year’s surge in inflation is starting to weigh on business spending.
“A recession is going to materially impact WeWork’s operations because SMEs (small and medium-sized enterprises) are going to cut costs. This may lead to an increase in WFH (work-from-home) set-up,” Third Bridge analyst Max Georgiou said.
WeWork expects fourth-quarter revenue of between $870 million and $890 million, below Wall Street targets of $923.8 million.
It did not disclose which U.S. locations it would exit.
The closures are expected to cost about $200 million in remaining rent payments on the leases, while contributing roughly $140 million to annual adjusted core earnings, WeWork Chief Executive Sandeep Mathrani said.
“These locations are those that don’t meet our design criteria, have obsolescence or there’s an oversupply in the market.”
The company has been working to curb its real estate footprint and reduce headcount in the face of long-term lease obligations that stood at $15.57 billion at September-end. Some of its tenants, in contrast, are only on short-term leases.
WeWork went public in 2021 after a two-year struggle and currently has a market cap of around $1.77 billion. Its pre-IPO valuation was once pegged at nearly $50 billion.
It reported third-quarter revenue of $817 million, below market expectations of $865 million, according to a Refinitiv poll of five analysts.
It has also extended the maturity date of $500 million senior secured notes from February 2024 to March 2025. The notes remained undrawn at quarter-end.
(Reporting by Kannaki Deka in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika Syamnath)
Thursday Closing Bell, November 10 (4 PM ET)
DJIA | 33,717.07 +1,198.04 (+3.68%) |
S&P 500 | 3,955.87 +207.30 (+5.53%) |
NASDAQ | 11,114.15 +760.97 (+7.35%) |
Russell 2000 | 1,865.90 +105.56 (+6.00%) |
Crude Oil | 86.28 +.047 (+0.55%) |
US Dollar Index | 107.787 -2.685 (-2.45%) |