Christmas appears to have come early for Kirkland & Ellis. The law firm filed court papers last week detailing $41.5 million ...
That chain could still survive, but another food-based company, KDC, which operates the Do Good Foods brand, has moved from ...
Iconic and essential retailers have been marching into bankruptcy court this year as issues related to supply chain ...
United Airlines filed for bankruptcy today, the largest such case ever in the global airline industry, after high costs and low air fares left the world's No. 2 carrier with too much debt and not ...
Office-sharing company WeWork filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in federal court Monday. Valued in 2019 at $47 billion in a round led by Masayoshi Son's SoftBank, the company tried and ...
WeWork, which provides coworking spaces, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Monday, capping off a dramatic collapse for a company once valued at $47 billion. Signage for shared office giant WeWork ...
NASHVILLE, TN - SEPTEMBER 13: (L-R) Brian Kelley of Florida Georgia Line, Ashton Kutcher, Adam ... [+] Neumann CEO of WeWork and Tyler Hubbard of Florida Georgia Line take photos backstage during ...
WeWork, the once-buzzy startup that was valued at $47 billion at its peak, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Monday in federal court in New Jersey. In its bankruptcy petition, the ...
While the 2023 Miss Universe pageant, known for its inclusion transgender contestants, will still take place this Saturday, the JKN Global Group behind it filed for bankruptcy just days before the ...
The company WeWork, which spent years trying to offer flexible workers the opportunity to work in spruced up unused office space, at their expense, has now filed for bankruptcy. The company was ...
Office-sharing company WeWork Inc. filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in New Jersey on Monday, after a decade of financial turmoil and four years since it was valued at $47 billion valuation.
WeWork, once a venture-capital darling, has filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy. WSJ breaks down how the desk-rental giant co-founded by Adam Neumann went from highflying startup to bankrupt penny stock.