Twitter, Tesla, Musk see billions evaporate
Elon Musk, still the world's richest man, is poorer by nearly $39 billion since he spoke of buying out Twitter. Irony. At $231 billion of worth on the Forbes Real Time Billionaires Index at close of play on Friday, only part of Musk's losses are because of his still single-digit ownership of Twitter.
Most of the vapourisation is coming from investors abandoning Tesla. Their carp is that legal issues at Twitter might distract the maverick suitor. Of his two infatuations, Musk's Tesla has fared worse. Stock was down almost 21 per cent in the last 30 days at $769 Friday.
Seventeen days back, Musk had put a $44-billion tag to buy out Twitter. On Friday, he threatened a classic u-turn, saying he demanded greater clarity that Twitter has just 5 per cent fake accounts.
"Twitter deal temporarily on hold pending details supporting calculation that spam/fake accounts do indeed represent less than 5% of users," Musk tweeted, challenging Twitter's claim that spam and bot accounts are less than 5 per cent of total users.
Predictably, Twitter crashed more than 25 per cent at one point. It managed to arrest the bloodbath only when Musk followed up saying he is "still committed to the acquisition."
The stock recovered somewhat to 9.67 per cent down at just over $40, still way below the $54.20 per share purchase price Musk said he would put on the table.
Friday's closing is just a hair breadth above the 39.31 price on April 1, when Musk chose to disclose that he had built up a sizeable stake in TWTR stock. His delayed disclosure is legally suspect under Securities and Exchange Commission rules.
Twitter's market cap on Friday was $34.458 billion. That's an uncool $9.5 billion lower than what Musk had dangled for a complete buyout.
Musk's long shadow seems to engulf morale and talent. Two top Twitter executives exited just this week. Twitter's general manager of consumer product Kayvon Beykpour said CEO Parag Agrawal asked him to leave.
General manager of revenue Bruce Falck announced his departure too.
"The truth is that this isn't how and when I imagined leaving Twitter, and this wasn't my decision. Parag asked me to leave after letting me know that he wants to take the team in a different direction," Beykpour said in a candid tweet.
Falck, who was with Twitter for 5 years, announced his departure without specifying which of the parties took the first step. Twitter CEO Agrawal announced Falck and Beykpour leaving the company in an email.
He noted pausing most hiring and pulling back on spending. "Effective this week, we are pausing most hiring and backfills, except for business critical roles as determined by Staff members in partnership with their HRBPs (human resource business partners) We will also be reviewing all extended offers to determine criticality and those that should be pulled back."
Agrawal said he had no plans for layoffs, but leaders can be removed. "We are not planning company-wide layoffs, but leaders will continue making changes to their organizations to improve efficiencies as needed. As always, performance management will continue to be a priority at this time at all levels to ensure we have the strongest teams possible."