Mutual funds like Fidelity's famed Contrafund have slashed valuations on their WeWork stakes
- WeWork's mutual fund investors, like Fidelity's massive Contrafund, have changed up their valuations of stakes in the coworking company.
- Fidelity slashed its valuation of the fund's private WeWork shares by nearly a third between the end of 2018 and this summer, while T. Rowe Price boosted the value of its stakes.
- Hartford's Capital Appreciation fund increased the value on the shares it holds from one round of funding and cut the value of shares from a separate round.
- Those mutual funds do agree on one thing: WeWork is classified as a real estate company in all their filings.
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WeWork's valuation is confusing to everyone, even seasoned asset managers.
Mutual funds offered by Fidelity, T. Rowe Price, and Hartford Funds all recently changed up the valuation they are putting on shares of the real-estate/technology/wellness company founded and run by Adam Neumann.
The coworking firm is considering the drastic move of cutting its $47 billion valuation in half before a planned IPO, according to media reports. It had unveiled its financials in a move towards listing on public markets - exposing the numbers behind its wide losses and attracting high-profile criticism in the process.
Fidelity, which has exposure to WeWork through its massive Contrafund, slashed the fund's valuation on WeWork shares between the end of last year and the middle of this summer, according to a regulatory filing.
The mutual fund giant once valued the company significantly higher than its peers, but has cut the valuation of WeWork shares in the Contrafund by roughly a third. Across the shares the firm holds in WeWork's Series A, E, and F funding rounds, the devaluation resulted in a drop of more than $120 million from the fund's assets.
To be sure, the Contrafund's overall holdings are $117.5 billion, but the move shows how much privately held shares can fluctuate. And how exactly funds put a price tag on private stakes is something the SEC is looking at more closely.
Other funds, like T. Rowe Price's Diversified Mid-Cap Growth fund, have upped the value of their WeWork stakes.
Hartfords' Capital Allocation Fund increased the value of its shares from WeWork's Series D-1 funding round, but cut the value of the shares it holds from WeWork's Series D-2 round.
There does seem to be one thing that all the funds can agree on: WeWork is listed in the real estate section of each fund's report.
The funds and WeWork declined to comment or did not immediately respond to requests for comment.