WeWork parent the We Company on Monday withdrew its arrangement to take the workplace space leasing company public less than a week after ousting its CEO. WeWork's new co-CEOs, Artie Minson and Sebastian Gunningham, said in an explanation that "We have decided to postpone our IPO to focus on our core business, the fundamentals of which remain strong," as per The Associated Press. WeWork is the greatest tenant in New York City, and has made its name leasing, revamping and subleasing office space in urban areas across the country. It was once secretly esteemed as high as $47 billion. Since filing regulatory documents to open up to the world on August 14, be that as it may, it has confronted inquiries concerning its enormous financial losses, funding and corporate governance. Before hauling out, WeWork was thinking about an IPO well underneath $20 billion, as per the AP. WeWork founder Adam Neumann ventured down as CEO a week ago. The organization has been slicing costs as it tries to support its accounting report. The We Company likewise has a eclectic portfolio of side businesses intended to take into account the prosperity of its individuals — a community-building vision set out by Neumann, an attractive Israeli settler who incompletely experienced childhood with a kibbutz, and his significant other Rebekah Neumann, a confirmed yoga educator who concentrated both business and Buddhism at Cornell University. Those ventures incorporate a wellness company called "Rise by We," a school for kids called "WeGrow," and a co-living rental organization "WeLive." An obtaining binge incorporated the social media network Meetup. For the present, WeWork has money. It was perched on $2.5 billion toward the finish of June. Be that as it may, it keeps on consuming more cash than it gets. Its yearly misfortune adds up to about $5,200 per client. The organization is on track to consume $2.7 billion this year. Some $1.5 billion will land one year from now from its greatest investor, the Japanese firm SoftBank. In any case, even with that infusion, vulnerability stays about whether WeWork can raise enough money to help its forceful development. A week ago, S&P Global Ratings slice WeWork's credit rating to "junk" status.