Wework adam neumann lawsuit stock deal softbank – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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WeWork co-founder Adam Neumann is suing SoftBank over failed $3 billion stock deal

He was set to sell $970 million in shares

He was set to sell $970 million in shares

WeWork Presents The San Francisco Creator Awards At The Palace of Fine Arts Theatre
WeWork Presents The San Francisco Creator Awards At The Palace of Fine Arts Theatre
Photo by Kelly Sullivan / Getty Images for the WeWork Creator Awards
Adi Robertson
is a senior tech and policy editor focused on online platforms and free expression. Adi has covered virtual and augmented reality, the history of computing, and more for The Verge since 2011.

WeWork co-founder Adam Neumann is suing investor SoftBank for scrapping a $3 billion stock buyout agreement. The New York Times reports that Neumann accused SoftBank of breaching its contract and “secretly taking actions to undermine” the agreement, which SoftBank abandoned last month. He’s looking to merge the case with a similar suit by WeWork’s board in April, but SoftBank has called those claims a “desperate and misguided attempt” to rewrite the deal’s history.

SoftBank agreed to bail out The We Company last year while writing off billions of dollars on an investment due to WeWork’s unprofitable and ill-advised operations. The deal included a plan to buy $3 billion worth of stock from Neumann and other shareholders. But in April, SoftBank backed out, saying that WeWork hadn’t met the conditions of its contract. It also cited legal inquiries by the US Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission. Neumann himself planned to sell $970 million in stock.

WeWork shareholders accused SoftBank of “buyer’s remorse” and sued for a “clear breach of its contractual obligations.” According to The Guardian, this latest lawsuit says that “Mr. Neumann put his trust in [SoftBank and SoftBank’s Vision Fund] to be stewards of WeWork, which he — and thousands of others — had worked so hard to build,” only to be met with “brazen” abuses.

SoftBank, conversely, said that “under the terms of our agreement, which Adam Neumann signed, SoftBank had no obligation to complete the tender offer in which Mr Neumann — the biggest beneficiary — sought to sell nearly $1 billion in stock.”

These suits don’t necessarily help WeWork’s actual financial situation, which was shaky even before the novel coronavirus devastated the world economy. The company reportedly missed rent in some locations last month, and its brand of shared workspaces could translate poorly to a post-pandemic world. Nonetheless, it has attempted to keep offices open, even as governments have required many workers to stay home.

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