Tech

Nasdaq executive is 'bullish' on WeWork and hopes the company will go public eventually

Key Points
  • In a fireside conversation at the Fintech Abu Dhabi conference Tuesday, Nasdaq Vice Chairman Edward Knight said he is "bullish" on WeWork in the long term.
  • "We hope eventually it will list on Nasdaq," Knight said.
  • On Monday, CNBC reported Japanese conglomerate SoftBank is in advanced talks to take control of WeWork.
Hope WeWork will eventually list with us, Nasdaq exective says
VIDEO3:4503:45
Hope WeWork will eventually list with us, Nasdaq exective says

A top Nasdaq executive defended WeWork on Tuesday, saying he hopes the workspace company will "eventually" list on the exchange even as it faces an expected bailout by Japan's SoftBank.

In a fireside conversation at the Fintech Abu Dhabi conference, Nasdaq Vice Chairman Edward Knight said he is "bullish" on WeWork in the long term.

"We hope eventually it will list on Nasdaq," Knight said.

WeWork pulled its plans for an initial public offering on the exchange in September as investors became skeptical after the company's massive losses and the leadership of former CEO Adam Neumann.

On Monday, CNBC reported Japanese conglomerate SoftBank is in advanced talks to take control of WeWork in a deal that would value the company at between $7.5 billion and $8.5 billion on a prefunding basis. WeWork's valuation had been as high as $47 billion in private markets earlier this year.

Being a public company is not for everyone, Nasdaq executive says
VIDEO1:3901:39
Being a public company is not for everyone, Nasdaq executive says

The company had been set to run out of cash by mid-November, CNBC reported last week. As part of the bailout, which could be announced as soon as Tuesday, Neumann will get roughly $1.7 billion from SoftBank to walk away from the company, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

At the event on Tuesday, Nasdaq's Knight maintained there's a "great story in WeWork." He said Neumann had been successful in attracting capital and "disrupting the whole real estate market in the United States with his idea."

"I think that idea will eventually have a place in the public markets and the retail public will be able to invest in it, and hopefully it will be on Nasdaq," he said.