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Musk-Twitter Countdown to Close $44 Billion Deal Begins

After months of “will they or won’t they,” Elon Musk is running up against a court-ordered deadline to deliver on his promise to buy Twitter Inc. for $44 billion.

Elon Musk
Elon Musk

After months of “will they or won’t they,” Elon Musk is running up against a court-ordered deadline to deliver on his promise to buy Twitter Inc. for $44 billion.

The world’s richest person and the social media company he favors have until 5 p.m. Friday in Delaware to do the deal. If they don’t, Delaware Chancery Judge Kathaleen St. J. McCormick has said, she will schedule a November trial to determine whether Twitter can force the impulsive billionaire to complete the buyout he mused on, proposed, shunned and finally put back on the table.

The day of reckoning, after a bitter round of suing and countersuing, will almost certainly end in a transaction. Musk assured bankers this week he would wrap the buyout on time. The banks providing $13 billion in debt financing are in the process of transferring the cash, while the New York Stock Exchange says action is pending to suspend trading of Twitter shares before Friday’s open. And Musk already seems to be settling in: He changed his profile descriptor on the platform to “Chief Twit,” showed up at Twitter’s San Francisco headquarters Wednesday and will be addressing staff on Friday.

Musk offered an olive branch, denying he plans to cut 75% of staff, and he told advertisers he doesn’t want Twitter to become a “free-for-all hellscape.”

Read More: Musk Tells Bankers He Plans to Close Twitter Deal on Friday 

A deal would close one of the most contentious merger fights in US legal history and mark an uncertain new era for the social platform, which remains a vital forum but one Musk says he plans to revolutionize. If he and Twitter can’t close the deal by themselves, its fate will lie in the hands of McCormick, possibly with the same result: She has already made a series of rulings against Musk and is unlikely to appreciate having canceled the original trial date at his urging.

“It seems to me there’s a 99% chance this deal is going to close,” said Brian Quinn, a Boston College law professor who teaches merger-and-acquisition cases. “All the indications are Mr. Musk is resigned to his fate.”

Elon MuskPhotographer: Samuel Corum/Bloomberg
Elon MuskPhotographer: Samuel Corum/Bloomberg

As of right now, Musk looks to be headed full steam ahead toward closing the acquisition at the $54.20-per-share price he offered in April and Twitter says it is determined to get. At least some of the investors in the equity portion of the deal have already transferred funds, people with knowledge of the matter told Bloomberg.

Twitter shares closed up 1.1% at $53.35 after news of a chipper memo to staff Wednesday saying Musk would be “meeting with folks” at the office. That bump narrowed the gap between the share price and the takeover offer to less than $1. The stock, which has swung wildly as the dispute ground on, was about 40% below the offer price at one point in early July after Musk said he was walking away from the buyout. It has climbed ever closer to the offer this week after the Bloomberg report on the call with bankers.

But the deal’s short, tortured history and Musk’s whipsaw style have some experts on guard for a last, last, last minute surprise.

“Trying to predict what Elon Musk is going to do is a fool’s gambit,” said Jill Fisch, a University of Pennsylvania law professor who specializes in Delaware corporate disputes.

Twitter sued the 51-year-old Tesla Inc. chief executive officer in July after he said the deal was off. Musk argued that the company had misled him about the number of spam and bot accounts lurking in the 230 million-plus customer base, providing legal grounds for him to cancel the transaction. Twitter said the claim was a pretext for him to abandon the acquisition amid a decline in financial markets and a massive case of buyer’s remorse.

After the pretrial rulings against him and on the eve of a questioning session by Twitter’s lawyers, Musk agreed to consummate the buyout. His lawyers asked McCormick to delay an Oct. 17 trial so they could close. 

That spared Musk not only the discomfort of the pretrial deposition but also the possible release on the public court docket of more of his private texts, not to mention whatever might come up at trial.

Read More: Musk Revives $44 Billion Twitter Bid, Aiming to Avoid Trial 

If he blows up the deal at this point, Fisch said, Musk would be plunging himself into a world of hurt.

“The letter his side sent to the judge asking her to delay the trial has him pretty much locked in,” she said.

Twitter headquarters in San Francisco.Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg
Twitter headquarters in San Francisco.Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

Shareholders and employees of Twitter are keenly awaiting a resolution. Morale at the company, and motivation to build new products, are declining amid uncertainty over how or when Musk will execute his vision of “creating X, the everything app” -- which would basically be a US version of China’s WeChat -- should he take over. Twitter remains in a hiring freeze, adjusting to a difficult economic market for its primary business, advertising, on top of all the chaos.

Meanwhile, Tesla’s stock has been under pressure from Musk’s bid for Twitter, as investors worry that taking on another big company would distract the Tesla CEO from his duties -- and that Musk, who is also the electric car maker’s biggest shareholder, would have to sell more of his Tesla stock to finance the buyout. 

Read More: The Twitter Deal Pierces Elon Musk’s Reality Distortion Field

If the acquisition somehow falls apart again, Musk would be going to trial in Wilmington against an adversary that Bloomberg Intelligence estimates has the legal advantage. Despite a whistleblower’s claims against Twitter, the company had a 70% chance of winning a court order requiring Musk to consummate the buyout at the original offered price, BI analyst Matthew Schettenhelm wrote in September. 

Both Twitter and Tesla are incorporated in Delaware, corporate home to more than half of US public companies and more than 60% of Fortune 500 firms. Its Chancery Court judges, led by McCormick, are business law experts who hear cases without a jury, often on a fast-track basis.

A longtime Twitter devotee and super tweeter himself, with more than 100 million followers, Musk has been tweeting about his hopes and dreams for the platform. He said on an earnings call last week that he was “excited about the Twitter situation.” He described the company as an asset with “incredible potential” that has “sort of languished for a long time.” 

He added that he was obviously overpaying for it.

The case is Twitter v. Musk, 22-0613, Delaware Chancery Court (Wilmington).

Read More: Twitter, Musk Talks Warm Up as Buyout Closing Deadline Nears 

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