With Twitter’s lawsuit against Elon Musk (and Musk’s cross complaints) expected to go to trial in less than two weeks, the richest man in the world (with a net worth of nearly $248 billion) has made an abrupt 180-degree change and says that he wants to go ahead with his $44 billion purchase of Twitter at $54.20 per share. Musk had hoped to back out of the deal when Twitter couldn’t prove to his satisfaction that less than 5% of Twitter users were bots.
Twitter shares soar after Musk decides to go ahead with his offer to pay $54.20/share for the company
Musk reverses field, now says he wants to buy Twitter for $44 billion
Musk is scheduled to give sworn testimony during two depositions scheduled for Thursday and Friday in Austin, Texas. In searching for a reason to explain Elon’s about-face, Ann Lipton, a professor of corporate governance at Tulane Law School, said, “I think he recognized that litigation is not going well on his part.”
Twitter could ask that the Court help supervise the closing of the deal. The company could also ask that Musk be ordered to pay a daily interest fee dating back to September 13th, which is when Twitter shareholders approved the deal. To help pay for the transaction, Musk sold $8.5 billion in Tesla stock in April. The following month he raised $7 billion from various investors. Morgan Stanley, and other investment banks, are kicking in $13 billion in debt and remain on the hook to deliver the money until April.
If he buys Twitter, Musk says he will welcome Donald Trump back to the platform
Just in case some of the money he helped raise from equity partners doesn’t appear, Musk sold another $7 billion of Tesla stock in August. Before backing out of the deal, Elon told investors that by 2025, he could get Twitter up to 500 million daily users and help it generate $13.2 in annual revenue. As of this past July, Twitter had 238 million global active daily users. For the 12 months ending on June 30, 2022, Twitter collected $5.23 billion in revenue.
Meanwhile, Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal has not addressed the unexpected turn of events but Twitter’s general counsel Sean Edgett emailed employees and said, “I will continue to keep you posted on significant updates, but in the meantime, thank you for your patience as we work through this on the legal side.” According to the latest report in the Times, the deal could close within weeks.
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