Inside WeWork's week from hell: How the mass layoffs went down
When staffers in WeWork's New York City headquarters received a calendar invite this week for a mandatory meeting with a note telling them to
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When staffers in WeWork's New York City headquarters received a calendar invite this week for a mandatory meeting with a note telling them to
There's more bad news for Slack: The messaging software company's stock plunged nearly 10% Tuesday after Microsoft announced that its rival Teams product has 20 million users. Slack said in September it had just 12 million customers.
One month after WeWork's former CEO, Adam Neumann, received a massive payout despite all but running the company into the ground, more than 12,000 global staffers are bracing for mass layoffs this week.
The political unrest in Asia's premiere financial hub has taken a dark, violent turn this week. But the turmoil is not scaring investors and companies away — at least, not yet.
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has announced plans to raise up to $13.4 billion by issuing shares in Hong Kong, a vote of confidence in the Asian financial hub that has been rocked by months of civil unrest.
Saudi Aramco on Saturday released details of an initial public offering that could shatter records and will give investors the chance to own a piece of the world's most profitable company.
Saudi Arabia's state oil monopoly makes more money than any other company on Earth. But low oil prices, the climate crisis and geopolitical risk could deter investors from buying into the partial privatization of Saudi Aramco.
Uber is still reporting steep losses but its revenue growth is showing some promise.
Saudi Arabia is moving forward with an initial public offering of its huge state oil producer that could shatter records and give investors the chance to own a piece of the world's most profitable company.
Beyond Meat posted strong earnings and eked out its first quarterly profit, but investors were unimpressed.