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Imagine working at a company, that has these gigantic valuations, and you hold stock in this company. Since you probably don't have the insights to the actual finances of the company you, like everyone else, base the company's valuation on the private market. Then only to find out that your shares you thought were worth $100, are now worth $15 (except much worse).

In the meantime, your CEO walks away with over a billion dollars in his pocket on a handshake deal to basically shut up and leave.

I would be furious if I was an employee that dedicated time and energy to this company.




> I would be furious if I was an employee that dedicated time and energy to this company.

And those employees probably have justification for a civil case, which doesn't require the SEC to be involved.


I guess it's a lesson. Never personally invest yourself into any company, since - as just a foot soldier - you have zero control over the events.

Even if you have a chance to get your walkaway money, it's just a job. They pay you for your skills and your talent, not your personal life. Be involved, be professional, care, but do not get personally attached.

What you bring from a job is learning experience and new friendships, but the job itself should be viewed as a pretty ephemeral concept. Never fall for the "we are a family" line - it's incredibly hard to be fired from a "family".


Those employees definitely ended up in a shitty situation, but there are no grounds for a lawsuit.


What about those employees that did sell some stock at high valuations though?

Some employees were indeed able to sell shares twice along the way, just like Neumann was. The most recent sale opportunity, in January 2019, offered employees $54 per share if they sold their equity to SoftBank, WeWork’s largest outside shareholder, according to WeWork’s financial prospectus, at an overall valuation of around $23 billion.

Not everyone was eligible to sell, nor did everyone take that opportunity. Those who did are, with the benefit of hindsight, thankful.

https://www.vox.com/recode/2019/9/30/20887656/juul-wework-em...

Plus i m not sure how sympathetic judges are going to be for employees' anger that they didn't become overnight millionaires


If your a shareholder you can get the financials of the company assuming wework was a Delaware Corp. Exercise 1 share of your options to become a shareholder.


Sometimes you have to forfeit these rights in order to receive your shares.




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