WeWork Investor Presentation Deck

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February 2023

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#1wework February 2023 Investor Presentation For all the ways you work, we're here.#2Disclaimer Forward-Looking Statements Certain statements made in this presentation may be deemed "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, as amended. These forward looking statements generally are identified by the words "believe," "project," "expect," "anticipate," "estimate," "intend," "strategy," "future," "opportunity," "plan," "pipeline," "may," "should," "will," "would," "will be," "will continue," "will likely result," and similar expressions. Forward-looking statements are predictions, projections and other statements about future events that are based on current expectations and assumptions and, as a result, are subject to risks and uncertainties. Although WeWork believes the expectations reflected in any forward-looking statement are based on reasonable assumptions, it can give no assurance that its expectations will be attained, and it is possible that actual results may differ materially from those indicated by these forward-looking statements due to a variety of risks, uncertainties and other factors. Such factors include, but are not limited to, WeWork's ability to refinance, extend, restructure or repay outstanding debt; its outstanding indebtedness; its liquidity needs to operate its business and execute its strategy, and related use of cash; its ability to raise capital through equity issuances, asset sales or the incurrence of debt; WeWork's expectations regarding its ability to continue as a going concern; WeWork's preparation of its financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2022; retail and credit market conditions; higher cost of capital and borrowing costs; impairments; its current and projected liquidity needs; changes in general economic conditions, including as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and the conflict in Ukraine; WeWork's expectations regarding its exits of underperforming locations, including the timing of any such exits and our ability to retain our members; delays in customers and prospective customers returning to the office and taking occupancy, or changes in the preferences of customers and prospective customers with respect to remote or hybrid working, as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic leading to a parallel delay, or potentially permanent change, in receiving the corresponding revenue; the impact of foreign exchange rates on WeWork's financial performance; and WeWork's inability to implement its business plan or meet or exceed its financial projections. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made. WeWork discusses these and other risks and uncertainties in its annual and quarterly periodic reports and other documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. WeWork undertakes no duty or obligation to update or revise these forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future developments, or otherwise, except as required by law. Use of Data This presentation contains information concerning WeWork's solutions and WeWork's industry, including market size and growth rates of the markets in which WeWork participates, that are based on industry surveys and publications or other publicly available information, other third-party survey data and research reports commissioned by WeWork and its internal sources. This information involves many assumptions and limitations. There can be no guarantee as to the accuracy or reliability of such assumptions and you are cautioned not to give undue weight to this information. Further, no representation is made as to the reasonableness of the assumptions made by third parties or the accuracy or completeness of any projections or modeling or any other information contained herein. Any data on past performance of WeWork or modeling contained herein is not an indication as to future performance. WeWork has not independently verified any such third-party information. Similarly, other third-party survey data and research reports commissioned by WeWork, while believed by WeWork to be reliable, are based on limited sample sizes and have not been independently verified by WeWork. In addition, projections, assumptions, estimates, goals, targets, plans and trends of the future performance of the industry in which WeWork operates, and WeWork's future performance, are necessarily subject to uncertainty and risk due to a variety of factors, including those described above. These and other factors could cause results to differ materially from those expressed in the estimates made by independent parties and by WeWork. Except as may be required by law, WeWork ass no obligation to update the information in this presentation. Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures This presentation includes certain financial measures not presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States ("GAAP"): Adjusted EBITDA, Free Cash Flow, Building Margin. and non-GAAP financial measures of foreign exchange (including on a forward looking basis). These financial measures are not measures of financial performance in accordance with GAAP and may exclude items that are significant in understanding and assessing our financial results. Therefore, these measures should not be considered in isolation or as an alternative to net loss or other measures of profitability, liquidity or performance under GAAP. You should be aware that our presentation of these measures may not be comparable to similarly titled measures used by other companies, which may be defined and calculated differently. WeWork believes that these non-GAAP measures of financial results (including on a forward-looking basis) provide useful supplemental information to investors about WeWork. WeWork's management uses forward-looking non-GAAP measures to evaluate WeWork's projected financials and operating performance. Reconciliations of historical non-GAAP measures to their most directly comparable historical GAAP counterparts are included in the Appendix to this presentation. To the extent that forward-looking non-GAAP financial measures are provided, they are presented on a non-GAAP basis without reconciliations of such forward-looking non-GAAP measures due to the inherent difficulty in forecasting and quantifying certain amounts that are necessary for such reconciliations. Non-GAAP Financial Measures of Foreign Exchange We supplement our GAAP financial results by evaluating our performance excluding the effect of foreign exchange or by assessing our performance using the foreign exchange rates that we used to calculate certain forward-looking financial information, to facilitate period-over-period comparisons. We believe that the disclosure of our financial results on a budgeted foreign exchange basis is a useful supplemental measure of operating performance because it facilitates comparison of our current performance to our guidance provided by excluding the effects of foreign currency volatility. We calculate our budgeted foreign exchange results by translating the current quarter functional currency results at our budgeted foreign exchange rate, which is an estimated forward rate for each of our functional currencies determined during the fourth quarter of the prior fiscal year as part of our annual budgeting process. The presentation of financial results on a budgeted foreign exchange basis should be considered in addition to, but not a substitute for, measures of financial performance reported in accordance with U.S. GAAP. India, China, Israel and Common Desk This presentation includes operating metrics (including number of locations, workstation capacity, and memberships) relating to (A) WeWork's investments and operations in China and India, which are not consolidated, and (B) certain locations in the United States where WeWork's operations are under the "Common Desk" brand and WeWork receives a management fee (and does not recognize other revenue or incur any operating costs) which are also not consolidated (the "Unconsolidated Common Desk Locations"). Therefore, the results of WeWork's operations in China and India as well as the Unconsolidated Common Desk Locations are not reflected in the WeWork financial statements and projections set forth in this presentation on a line-by-line basis, as such operations are not conducted through consolidated subsidiaries or controlling interests of WeWork. In June 2021, WeWork closed a franchise agreement and transferred the building operations and obligations of its Israel locations to the franchisee. Israel results of operations have been included through May 2021, and excluded from subsequent projections. Unless otherwise explicitly specified in this presentation, India, China and Israel related metrics are excluded from all calculations. Trademarks This presentation contains trademarks, service marks, trade names and copyrights of WeWork and other companies, which are the property of their respective owners. Preliminary Financial Information We report our financial results in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. All projected financial information and metrics in this press release are preliminary. These estimates are not a comprehensive statement of our financial position and results of operations. There is no assurance that we will achieve our forecasted results within the relevant period or otherwise. As part of the Company's financial statement closing process it is performing its going concern analysis, which will be concluded when the Company's audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2022 are finalized. wework Ⓒ2023 WeWork#3Our mission is to empower tomorrow's world at work. Our purpose is to harness the power of community to make a positive impact on people and the environment. we work 2023 WeWork#4Our Core Values TRIVE T RIGHT OO THE WeWork Values TO BE BETTER Wework Values GIVE ENTREP We Work Valves PRENEURIAL We work GRATITUDE Values BE KIND NG BE HUMAN TOG WwWork Values Do the right thing. Strive to be better, together. Be entrepreneurial. Give gratitude. Be human, be kind. Our Core Constituents IN <-0000 IC Colleagues 200 Members 直 Partners Shareholders Society wework Ⓒ2023 WeWork#5Transformed operating structure WeWork has made significant progress toward overhauling its business operations and cost structure, right-sizing its real estate portfolio and refining its value proposition. 4 Streamlined Operations and Expenses - Reduced location operating expenses - Significantly reduced SG&A expenses - Divested all non-core businesses 00 Optimized Portfolio - Over 250 full lease exits and 500 lease amendments from the beginning of 2020 through Q4 2022 - Achieved rent savings as a result of our portfolio optimization effort - Franchise and other management agreements in China, India, Israel and Latin America where local capital and expertise strengthen WeWork's international business Strengthened Value Proposition - Outsized growth vs commercial office market - Sequential growth in occupancy and revenue since April 2021 show continued momentum - Access memberships reached approximately 70,000 as Enterprise clients and SMBs alike continue strong adoption - Launched WeWork Workplace for operators and occupiers to manage their space, a true end-to-end solution for modern workplace needs wework Ⓒ2023 WeWork#6Flex office is at an inflection point in the U.S. and Globally Flex as a % of Commercial Real Estate U.S. Flexible Workspace Penetration of 3.5B total office supply RSF (1) 25% Projected share of total flexible workspace market (¹) ~5x Projected increase in revenue by 2030 (²) 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 JLL High Case TAM: 22.2% 2020 2022 2024 2026 2028 JLL Base Case TAM: 13.3% Implied wework High: 5.6% Base: 3.3% 2030 ▪▪▪▪ 73% of survey respondents in the United States intend to have some type of hybrid-work arrangements as part of their steady state business going forward. In EMEA, the proportion of survey respondents for whom flex space is currently less than 10% of their real estate portfolio is expected to halve in the next two years from 86% to 41%. -CBRE "Office Occupier Sentiment Survey", April 2022 for the United States, May 2022 for EMEA(3) (ii) (iii) Flex Sector Growth Drivers ($ Increasing adoption of hybrid work and rise of the "third workplace" Companies seeking flexibility of lease terms and potential cost savings Innovation in Workplace technology to drive collaboration and optimize RE footprint Sources: CBRE, JLL, and Green Street. 1. Illustrative TAM analysis based on flexible workspace projections for U.S. only. Implied total flexible workspace SQFT based on estimated 2.5% 2020 flexible workspace penetration as percentage of total office space; Total office estimate based on Green Street estimate. 2. Assumes total office market square footage and WeWork flexible workspace market share remains constant in the projection period. Based on projected base case flexible workspace penetration. 3. For the United States and EMEA per CBRE "Office Occupier Sentiment Survey." wework 5 © 2023 WeWork#7Product Offerings wework © 2023 WeWork#8WeWork's global footprint(¹) Systemwide 779 906k 682k LOCATIONS WORKSTATION CAPACITY PHYSICAL MEMBERSHIPS Consolidated 622 LOCATIONS 7 731k WORKSTATION CAPACITY 547k PHYSICAL MEMBERSHIPS 71k ALL ACCESS 70k ALL ACCESS USC LatAm Wholly-owned 1. Metrics presented as of December 31, 2022. Consolidated metrics include operations in the United States and Canada, Latin America, Europe, Japan, and Pacific regions. Systemwide metrics include consolidated regions as well as India, China, and Israel, which are not consolidated. EMEA Israel Consolidated JVs India China Space-as-a-Service Pacific Japan Unconsolidated JVs and Franchises wework © 2023 WeWork#9WeWork's three legs of the stool WeWork's holistic suite of flexible product offerings will continue to lead the workspace market 8 Space-as-a-Service Offering that creates flexibility of space, time, and portability of cost, as companies move away from long-term leases . Proven membership base and occupancy expected to normalize to historical levels Right-sized operations have created operating leverage, a path to profitability and compelling unit economics COVID has accelerated the shift to flexible workspace WeWork Access . All Access offering digitizes WeWork spaces and provides end customers with ultimate flexibility Single membership card allows employees to "Work From Anywhere" Marketplace offering strengthens membership through high-margin, value-add services WeWork Workplace ● End-to-end software solution for managing hybrid work Creates order for both employees and employers alike Enables flexibility without sacrificing connection and culture Facilitates shift from short-term return to office experiments to sustainable, long-term solutions#10Core product offerings 9 Dedicated desk Enjoy your own desk in a shared, private office with access to professional amenities and meeting rooms. Ideal size: 1-5 people Term: Monthly or Annually Private office Have a private office space with access to meeting rooms and professional amenities. Ideal size: 1-20 people Term: Monthly or Annually Office suite v=1p 4M Utilize office space designed for larger teams with available private amenities via add-ons. Ideal size: 20-100+ people Term: Monthly or Annually Space-as-a-Service Full-floor office / building Secure a fully dedicated workspace with private amenities and add your personal branding. Ideal size: 100+ people Term: Monthly or Annually#11Our turnkey solution WeWork provides companies of all sizes a comprehensive and flexible solution that saves money by minimizing up front costs and maximizing the value our membership fee. Traditional office lease costs $ Property $ Utilities $ Design & construction $ FF&E $ Enhanced health & safety measures $ Basic Internet $ Cleaning $ Maintenance $ Security $ Pantry provisions 10 All included in WeWork membership fee Space-as-a-Service we work 2022 WeWork. 15#12The world's top companies trust WeWork Global infrastructure of world-class partnerships and service providers will allow WeWork to scale quickly Members IBM. Uber PELOTON 25 NOVARTIS 11 Google moderna salesforce airbnb Johnson Johnson ORGANON Landlord Partners Blackstone bxp Boston Properties vanke TISHMAN SPEYER Brookfield Properties FUNO STARWOOD CAPITAL GROUP Hines Ivanhoé Cambridge Service Providers Note: Logos used herein are the property of third parties and for informational purposes only and do not imply any endorsement by those companies of WeWork's company or products or vice versa. CUSHMAN & WAKEFIELD CBRE Space-as-a-Service Colliers JLL AVISON YOUNG BLANCA NEWMARK wework © 2023 WeWork#13WeWork Access Products WeWork On Demand Bookable workspaces around the world by the hour 12 Pay-as-you-go Choose from over 320+ locations in 70+ major cities through the WeWork app. Global locations: 70+ cities Term: Hourly or daily WeWork All Access Monthly membership unlocks 500+ locations worldwide wework. Monthly membership Book workspace through the WeWork app, and unlock access to over 500+ WeWork locations around the world. Global locations: 500+ Term: Monthly All Access Memberships 15k Q1'21 Revenue: $9m 20k Q2'21 $13m 32k Q3'21 $20m 45k Q4'21 $29m 55k Q1'22 $36m Note: See "Terms and Definitions" pages for definition of All Access & Other Legacy Memberships. All Access revenue inclusive of On Demand. All Access memberships shown on a consolidated basis. 62k Q2'22 $45m 67k Access Q3'22 $47m 70k Q4'22 $50m wework Ⓒ2023 WeWork#14WeWork Workplace 13 - wework WORKPLACE wework F 1. As of December 2022. Manage Space www.g- Enhance the Employee Experience: Dynamic, user-friendly features enable intentional collaboration TEXT Make desks, interior offices, and meeting rooms bookable in WeWork and leased assets Create meaningful connections between team members with floor maps that show where and when colleagues are in the office Book groups of desks for team collaboration for a day or across multiple weeks work Over 42,000 Sales to Over 220 Companies (¹) An end-to-end software solution for seamless workspace booking, inventory management across assets, and space optimization through insights and analytics. eventory Approval & Pepers - Setings wwworkplace Healing r Meeting Room Analytics 271 Day Workplace Optimize Workplace Decisions: Universal portfolio management paired with actionable insights Capacity and overflow management by setting criteria for where and when specific teams can book space Daily utilization reporting and building level insights to drive efficient real estate decisions - Fully integrated with WeWork inventory and back-end solutions wework © 2023 WeWork#15Workplace Signed Deals Over 42,000 Sales to Over 220 Companies (¹) ORGANON Revolut multiverse iu INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES ORACLE SOLICITORS acre mindtickle dentsu 101 ways Workplace IBDO 1. As of December 2022. Logos used herein are the property of third parties and for informational purposes only and do not imply any endorsement for those companies of WeWork's company or products or vise versa. 14 wework © 2023 WeWork#16KEP Truck Wework Quarterly and Annual Results wework © 2023 WeWork#17Q4 2022 market overview Systemwide gross workstation sales (SF sold) (¹) Consolidated gross workstation sales (SF sold)(¹) Physical occupancy at quarter-end for consolidated locations Average commitment length (months) Consolidated All Access and other legacy memberships Q4'20 142k (8.5m SF) 105k (6.3m SF) 45% 20 13k 1. The square foot figure is based upon gross workstation sales multiplied by 60 square feet. 16 Q1'21 163k (9.8m SF) 120k (7.2m SF) 47% 21 15k Q2'21 202k (12.1m SF) 156k (9.4m SF) 50% 22 20k Q3'21 197k 217k (11.8m SF) (13.0m SF) 153k (9.3m SF) 56% 21 Q4'21 32k 164k (9.9m SF) 63% 20 45k Q1'22 166k (10.0m SF) 67% 211k 205k 205k 206k (12.7m SF) (12.3m SF) (12.3m SF) (12.3m SF) 20 Q2'22 55k 160k (9.6m SF) 70% 19 Q3'22 62k 162k (9.7m SF) 71% 19 Q4'22 67k 165k (9.9m SF) 75% 19 70k wework Ⓒ2023 WeWork#18Geographically diverse revenue streams Regions presented pro rata share of systemwide revenue Unconsolidated China Revenue: 6% Occupancy: 68% India Revenue: 4% Occupancy: 87% Israel Revenue: 2% Occupancy: 90% Common Desk Revenue: 1% Occupancy: 78% US & Canada Revenue: 40% Occupancy: 70% (1,2) UKI Revenue: 15% Occupancy: 82% EMEA Revenue: 10% Occupancy: 81% Latin America Japan Revenue: 5% Asia Pacific Revenue: 9% Revenue: 8% Occupancy: 66% Occupancy: 73% Occupancy: 85% Physical Membership ARPM $482 Q2'21 50% $485 Q2'21 Q3'21 Q3'21 $484 1. Revenue figures shown by region represent that region's revenue during the fourth quarter 2022 as a percent of total systemwide revenue in the same period. 2. Occupancy figures shown by region are shown as of December 31, 2022. 17 Q4'21 Consolidated Physical Occupancy $488 Q4'21 $484 Q1'22 Q1'22 $497 $481 Q2'22 Q2'22 $508 $477 Q3'22 Q3'22 $514 at Budget FX $481 Q4'22 75% Q4'22 wework © 2023 WeWork#19Continued improvement in operations As of December 31, 2022, 68 out of 99 consolidated markets were over 70% physical occupancy, with average physical occupancy of 81% and building margin of 22%. Number of Markets Q1 2022 Q2 2022 Q3 2022 Q4 2022 Physical Occupancy Workstations (Q4) % of Capacity (Q4) % of Revenue (Q4) Building Margin (%, Q4) Largest Markets by Workstations (Q4) 11 8 65 0% - 50% 22k 3% 2% (26%) Silicon Valley, San José (Costa Rica), Minneapolis, Salt Lake City 43 34 34 50% - 70% 222k 30% 23% 6% 26 Tokyo, Mexico City, Washington D.C., Los Angeles, Boston 17 19 21 70% - 80% 172k 24% 26% 9% 20 New York, Sydney, Atlanta, Seattle, Austin 28 38 38 80% - 100% 315k 43% 49% 29% London, São Paulo, Paris, Seoul, San Francisco Note: See "Terms and Definitions" page for definition of Building Margin. See "GAAP to non-GAAP Reconciliations" page for a reconciliation of Building Margin to its most comparable GAAP metric. 18 48 Consolidated Total (Q4) # of Markets: 99 Workstation Capacity: 731k Occupancy: 75% Building Margin: 17% wework © 2023 WeWork#20Building Margin and Occupancy US$ millions Consolidated Physical Occupancy Building Margin ($, millions) % Building Margin 45% ($183) Q4'20 (30%) 47% ($209) Q1'21 (36%) 50% ($192) Q2'21 (34%) 56% ($103) Q3'21 (16%) 63% ($9) Q4'21 (1%) 67% $34 Q1'22 5% 70% $86 Q2'22 11% Note: See "Terms and Definitions" page for definition of Building Margin. See "GAAP to non-GAAP Reconciliations" page for a reconciliation of Building Margin to its most comparable GAAP metric. 19 71% $105 Q3'22 13% 75% $144 Q4'22 17% wework © 2023 WeWork#21WeWork represents an outsized portion of demand Q4 2022 leasing activity Market Boston New York Miami San Francisco Chicago London Dublin Paris Berlin WeWork as a % of Market Stock (1) ~1% ~1% ~1% ~0.5% ~0.5% -1.5% ~1% ~1% ~0.5% Q4 2022 Traditional Market Square Feet Leased (¹) 760k 4,100k 710k 1,840k 930k 2,100k 560k 3,820k 1,770k Q4 2022 WeWork Square Feet Leased (2) 1. Please refer to "Market Share Methodology and Sources" for additional information. 2. WeWork leasing activity based on total new workstations sold and renewed in each market multiplied by 60 square feet per workstation. 20 160k 950k 80k 240k 170k 910k 50k 430k 190k Equivalent % of Q4 2022 Traditional Square Feet Leased (1) 21% 23% 11% 13% 19% 44% 8% 11% 11% WeWork Q4 Leasing as a Multiple of Market Stock 17x 21x 16x 22x 40x 30x 7x 17x 34x wework © 2023 WeWork#22WeWork represents an outsized portion of demand Full-Year 2022 leasing activity Market Boston New York Miami San Francisco Chicago London Dublin Paris Berlin WeWork as a % of Market Stock (1) ~1% ~1% ~1% ~0.5% ~0.5% -1.5% ~1% ~1% ~0.5% 2022 Traditional Market Square Feet Leased (¹) 4,800k 24,270k 3,540k 11,000k 5,570k 10,100k 2,620k 12,100k 7,980k 2022 WeWork Square Feet Leased (2) 860k 4,280k 340k 1,500k 1. Please refer to "Market Share Methodology and Sources" for additional information. 2. WeWork leasing activity based on total new workstations sold and renewed in each market multiplied by 60 square feet per workstation. 21 610k 3,500k 430k 1,280k 720k Equivalent % of 2022 Traditional Square Feet Leased (1) 18% 18% 9% 14% 11% 35% 16% 11% 9% WeWork 2022 Leasing as a Multiple of Market Stock 14x 16x 14x 23x 23x 22x 15x 16x 29x wework © 2023 WeWork#23Cash, commitments, and access to liquidity As of 12/31/22 (US$, millions) $287 Cash and Cash Equivalents $500 (1) Sr. Secured Notes Commitment $787 Cash and Commitments $500 (2) Secured Debt Covenant Capacity $1,287 (2) Cash, Commitments, and Access to Liquidity 1. The Senior Secured Notes commitment is presented as of December 2022. In January 2023, the Company issued $250 million of Senior Secured Notes and has $250 million available under the commitment as of 2/15/23. The Senior Secured Notes commitment, and notes issued thereunder, will step down to $446 million in February 2024. 2. This amount is shown as of December 31, 2022, and does not take into account transactions that occurred subsequent to year-end, including, but not limited to, the amendments to the Junior LC Tranche described in the earnings release. 22 wework © 2023 WeWork#24Capitalization table As of 12/31/22 (US$, millions) Cash & cash equivalents $1.1B/$930M Senior LC Tranche (1) $350M Junior LC Tranche (2) $500M Senior Secured Notes Commitment (³) JapanCo Debt (4) Total secured debt Senior Unsecured Notes Senior Unsecured Notes (Series II) Senior Unsecured Notes (Series 1) Total unsecured debt Total outstanding debt Net outstanding debt Interest Rate 6.125% 9.593% 7.500% / 11.000% PIK 2.500% - 3.300% 7.875% 5.000% 5.000% Maturity 3/14/2025 11/30/2023 3/15/2025 Various 5/1/2025 7/10/2025 7/10/2025 1. The Senior LC Tranche commitments stepped down to $930 million on February 10, 2023. On February 15, 2023, the Senior LC Tranche commitments were increased from $930 million to $960 million. 2. In February 2023, the Junior LC Tranche was amended to extend the maturity date from November 2023 to March 2025, increase the tranche from $350 million to $470 million and reset the interest rate from SOFR + 650 basis points to SOFR +990 basis points. 3. The Senior Secured Notes commitment, and notes issued thereunder, will step down to $446 million in February 2024 and the interest rate will increase to 11.000%, payable in-kind. In January 2023, the Company issued $250 million of Senior Secured Notes. 4. Represents outstanding letters of credit/indebtedness incurred by a joint-venture entity equally owned by the Company and an affiliate of SoftBank Group Corp. 23 Amount $287 $350 $22 $372 $669 $550 $1,650 $2,869 $3,241 $2,954 wework © 2023 WeWork#2524 Appendix#26Key performance indicators As of December 31, 2022, Consolidated operations consist of all locations outside of China, India, Israel and Unconsolidated Common Desk locations. Physical Workstations (000s) Consolidated Unconsolidated Systemwide Total Physical Memberships (000s) Consolidated Unconsolidated Systemwide Total Physical Occupancy Consolidated Unconsolidated Systemwide Total Consolidated All Access Memberships (000s) All Access & Other Legacy Memberships 1.. Israel included in Consolidated metrics through Q1'21 25 Q4'20 865 166 1,030 387 89 476 45% 54% 46% 13 Q1'21 (1) 804 160 963 378 97 475 47% 61% 49% 15 Q2'21 770 168 937 386 110 469 50% 66% 53% 20 Q3'21 766 165 932 432 114 546 56% 69% 59% 32 Q4'21 746 166 912 469 121 590 63% 73% 65% 45 Q1'22 746 174 920 501 128 628 67% 73% 68% 55 Q2'22 749 172 922 528 133 661 70% 77% 72% 62 Q3'22 756 173 928 536 135 671 71% 78% 72% 67 Q4'22 731 175 906 547 135 682 75% 77% 75% 70 wework © 2023 WeWork#27Quarterly financial results (US$, millions) Adj. EBITDA Membership & Services Revenue Other Revenue Total Revenue Total Revenue at Budget FX Rates Location Operating Expenses Pre-Opening Expenses SG&A (¹) Adj. EBITDA Building Margin & Physical Membership ARPM Membership & Services Revenue Less: Unconsolidated Management Fee Revenue Adj. Membership & Services Revenue (A) Less: All Access & On Demand Revenue Physical Membership Revenue (B) Location Operating Expenses Q4'20 $612 54 666 (813) (46) (279) (472) Q4'20 $612 3 609 609 (813) (21) (792) (183) (30%) 397k 512 Q1'21 $579 19 598 (809) (33) (201) (446) Q1'21 $579 4 575 9 567 (809) (25) (784) (209) (36%) 378k 500 Q2'21 $565 28 593 (780) (43) (219) (449) Q2'21 $565 1 564 13 551 (780) (24) (756) (192) (34%) 381k 482 Q3'21 $627 34 661 (752) (40) (225) (356) Q3'21 $627 2 625 20 605 (752) (24) (728) (103) (16%) 416k 485 Q4'21 $696 21 718 (729) (42) (230) (283) Q4'21 $696 2 694 29 665 (729) (26) (703) (9) (1%) 458k 484 Q1'22 $747 18 765 771 (734) (47) (196) (212) Q1'22 $747 3 744 36 708 (734) (24) (710) 34 5% Q2'22 $801 488k 484 488 14 815 841 (734) (38) (177) (134) Q2'22 $801 5 796 45 751 (734) (24) (710) 86 11% Q3'22 $815 2 817 868 (729) (23) (170) (105) 521k 481 497 Q3'22 $815 Less: Indirect Location Operating Expenses Adj. Location Operating Expenses (C) Building Margin (A - C) % Building Margin Average Physical Memberships (D) Physical Membership Monthly ARPM (B/ D) ($, ones) Physical Membership Monthly ARPM, Budget FX ($, ones) See "Terms and definitions" page for definitions of Adjusted EBITDA and Building Margin. See "GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliations" page for a reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA and Building Margin to their most comparable GAAP metric. 1. SG&A exclusive of stock-based compensation and other expenses excluded from Adjusted EBITDA 26 6 809 47 762 (729) (25) (704) 105 13% 532k 477 508 Q4'22 $838 10 848 905 (711) (13) (150) (26) Q4'22 $838 4 834 50 784 (711) (21) (690) 144 17% 543k 481 514 wework © 2023 WeWork#28GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation (US, millions) Q1'21 ($2,062) Q2'21 ($923) Net loss Income tax (benefit) provision Interest and other (income) expenses, net Depreciation and amortization Restructuring and other related costs Impairment expense Stock-based compensation expense Other Adj. EBITDA Location Gross Profit / (Loss) Including Depreciation & Amortization Depreciation and amortization Location Gross Profit / (Loss) Exclusive of Depreciation & Amortization Unconsolidated management fee revenue Stock-based compensation expense Indirect location operating expenses Building Margin Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities Purchase of property, equipment and capitalized software Free Cash Flow 27 Q4'20 ($1,168) (2) (105) 191 52 546 7 7 ($472) Q4'20 ($382) 181 ($201) (3) 1 21 ($183) Q4'20 ($439) (192) ($631) 3 553 184 494 299 54 29 ($446) Q1'21 ($414) 175 ($239) (4) 9 25 ($209) Q1'21 ($541) (129) ($670) 4 68 180 (28) 242 4 4 ($449) Q2'21 ($386) 170 ($215) (1) 1 24 ($192) Q2'21 ($618) (42) ($660) Q3'21 ($844) (2) 206 171 16 88 4 5 ($356) Q3'21 ($288) 162 ($125) (2) 1 24 ($103) Q3'21 ($380) (61) ($441) Q4'21 ($803) (2) 103 174 (48) 241 48 4 ($283) Q4'21 ($201) 164 ($37) (2) 5 26 ($9) Q4'21 ($373) (105) ($478) Q1'22 ($504) (1) 147 171 (130) 91 13 1 ($212) Q1'22 ($147) 158 $11 (3) 2 24 $34 Q1'22 ($338) (74) ($412) Q2'22 ($635) 3 316 158 (26) 36 13 1 ($134) Q2'22 ($85) 150 $65 (5) 2 24 $86 Q2'22 ($197) (101) ($298) Q3'22 ($629) 3 290 156 (34) 97 13 (1) ($105) Q3'22 ($63) 148 $85 (6) 1 25 $105 Q3'22 ($110) (95) ($205) Q4'22 ($527) 1 (55) 156 (10) 401 10 (2) ($26) Q4'22 ($21) 147 $126 (4) 1 21 $144 Q4'22 ($88) (68) ($156) Ⓒ2023 WeWork#29Terms and definitions Overall Business Definitions: Space-as-a-Service: WeWork's existing flexible workspace business, including incremental growth for WeWork's flexible workspace business. Includes revenues associated with asset-light management or franchise agreements with landlords where WeWork operates the space in exchange for a fee. Included in Membership and Services revenue in our consolidated financial statements. - WeWork Access: On Demand pay-as-you-go or All Access monthly membership providing an individual with access to over 500 WeWork locations. Included in Membership and Services revenue in our consolidated financial statements 28 - WeWork Workplace: turnkey third-party flexible workspace management solution leveraging WeWork's property and technology platform. - SMB: organizations with less than 500 full-time equivalent employees - Enterprise: organizations with greater than 500 full-time equivalent employees Operating KPIs: - Locations: represents the estimated number of open locations. A location is considered open when it begins to generate revenue. - Workstation Capacity: Represents the estimated number of workstations available at open locations (may also be referred to as 'Workstations' or 'Physical Workstations'). Physical Memberships: The number of WeWork physical memberships which is the number of occupied workstations in a given period. Physical Occupancy: is the number of physical memberships divided by workstation capacity. Physical Average Revenue per Membership ("ARPM"): membership and services revenue less revenue attributable to All Access and On Demand memberships, unconsolidated management fee revenue and workplace management fee revenue, divided by consolidated cumulative physical memberships in the period. - Budget Foreign Exchange Rate ARPM: membership and services revenue less revenue attributable to All Access and On Demand memberships and unconsolidated management fee revenue, calculated using the Company's budgeted foreign exchange rates, divided by consolidated cumulative physical memberships in the period. - All Access & Other Legacy Memberships: includes All Access monthly subscription memberships and Other Legacy Memberships. - Gross Workstation Sales: Include New Workstation Sales and renewals. Renewals include all members previously committed who continue their membership on a commitment. Renewals do not include month-to-month members. Average Commitment Length: represents base contract terms in months. This excludes the impact of any extension and / or termination options. The commitment lengths disclosed may include periods for which members have an option to terminate their commitments with a less than 10% penalty. wework © 2023 WeWork#30Terms and definitions (cont'd) Financial Metrics: Systemwide Revenue: systemwide location membership and service revenues represents the results of all locations regardless of ownership, including Consolidated and Unconsolidated Locations. 29 - Location Operating Expenses: include the day-to-day costs of operating an open location and exclude pre-opening costs, depreciation and amortization and sales and marketing, which are separately recorded. O Lease Cost: is recognized on a straight-line basis over the life of the lease term in accordance with GAAP and is the most significant component of location operating expenses O Direct Other Location Expenses: include utilities, ongoing repairs and maintenance, cleaning expenses, office expenses, security expenses, credit card processing fees and food and beverage costs. Direct location operating expenses also include personnel and related costs for the teams managing our buildings. O Indirect Other Location Expenses: include certain expenses that are necessary to operate our buildings but not directly tied to an individual building. Examples of these expenses include certain regional management and teams managing member relations, new member sales and facilities management. - Pre-Opening Expense: consist of expenses (including all lease costs, which also include non-cash GAAP straight-line lease cost) incurred before a location opens for member operations. Excludes depreciation and amortization expense and stock-based compensation expense. - SG&A: consist of sales and marketing, general and administrative and sourcing, development and other expenses, and certain community support expenses that are necessary to operate our buildings but not directly tied to an individual building. Excludes depreciation and amortization expense, stock-based compensation expense, expense related to stock-based payments for services rendered by consultants, expense related to costs associated with mergers, acquisitions divestitures, and capital raising activities, legal, tax, and regulatory reserves or settlements. - Building Margin: is a non-GAAP measure we define as membership and services revenue, excluding management fees earned at our Unconsolidated Locations, less location operating expenses, before depreciation and amortization, stock-based compensation and certain indirect location operating overhead expenses. Adj. EBITDA: is a non-GAAP measure we define as net loss before income tax (benefit) provision, interest and other (income) expense, net, depreciation and amortization expense, restructuring and other related cost, impairment /(gain on sale) of goodwill, intangibles and other assets, stock-based compensation expense, stock-based payments for services rendered by consultants, change in fair value of contingent consideration liabilities, legal, tax and regulatory reserves and settlements, legal costs incurred by the Company in connection with regulatory investigations and litigation, and expenses related to costs associated with mergers, acquisitions, divestitures and capital raising activities. - Free Cash Flow: is a non-GAAP measure we define as net cash provided by (used in) operating activities less purchases of property, equipment and capitalized software, each as presented in the Company's condensed consolidated statements of cash flows and calculated in accordance with GAAP. wework © 2023 WeWork#31Market share methodology and sources Market Boston New York Miami San Francisco Chicago London Dublin Paris Berlin 30 Market Office Stock as of Q4 2022 Source Total Boston commercial office square footage of 82m per CBRE Total Manhattan commercial office square footage of 415m per Cushman and Wakefield Total Miami commercial office square footage of 40m per Cushman and Wakefield Total San Francisco commercial office square footage of 210m per Jones Lang LaSalle, inclusive of Silicon Valley and Oakland Total Chicago CBD market stock of 143m sq.ft per Cushman and Wakefield Total London commercial office square footage of 285m per Cushman and Wakefield (as of Q2 2022) Total Dublin commercial office square footage of 47m per JLL Q2 2022 Report Total Paris commercial office square footage of 226m per estimate Total Berlin commercial office square footage of 228m per Jones Lang LaSalle Square Feet Leased in Q4 2022 and Full-Year Source Boston leasing activity of 760k sq.ft. in Q4 and 4.80m sq.ft. in FY'22 CBRE estimate Manhattan leasing activity of 4.10m sq.ft. in Q4 and 24.27m sq.ft. in FY'22 per Cushman and Wakefield estimate Miami leasing activity of 710k sq.ft. in Q4 and 3.54m sq.ft. in FY'22 per Cushman and Wakefield estimate San Francisco leasing activity of 1.84m sq.ft. in Q4 and 11.00m sq.ft. in FY'22 per Jones Lang LaSalle estimate, inclusive of Silicon Valley and Oakland Chicago leasing activity of 930k sq.ft. in Q4 and 5.57m sq.ft in FY'22 per Cushman and Wakefield London leasing activity of 2.10m sq.ft. in Q4 and 10.10m sq.ft in FY'22 per Jones Lang LaSalle Dublin leasing activity of 560k sq.ft. in Q4 and 2.62m sq.ft. in FY'22 square feet per Cushman and Wakefield estimate Paris leasing activity of 3.82m sq.ft. in Q4 and 12.10m sq.ft. in FY'22 per Immostat estimate Berlin leasing activity of 1.77m sq.ft. in Q4 and 7.98m sq.ft. in FY'22 per CBRE estimate wework © 2023 WeWork

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