Tesla founder Elon Musk slammed Twitter’s board for “objectively” not having their “economic interests” aligned with the company’s shareholders.
Musk’s critical tweets were posted after the board adopted a “poison pill” in an effort to thwart the billionaire’s hostile takeover of the company.
“Elon Musk is in for a bad time,” Laskie founder Chris Bakke posted. “I’m not sure he’s prepared to take on a couple PhDs, a few MBAs, and a Baroness who use Twitter once a year (to reset their passwords) and collectively own 77 shares of the company.”
A screenshot of Twitter board members’ ownership accompanied Bakke’s comments.
“Wow, with Jack departing, the Twitter board collectively owns almost no shares!” Musk reacted on Saturday. “Objectively, their economic interests are simply not aligned with shareholders.”
Wow, with Jack departing, the Twitter board collectively owns almost no shares! Objectively, their economic interests are simply not aligned with shareholders.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 16, 2022
The same day, the tech billionaire agreed with entrepreneur David Sacks’ post claiming a rejection of Musk’s offer to outright buy Twitter would expose “corruption.”
“If the game is fair, Elon will buy Twitter,” Sacks tweeted. “If the game is rigged, there will be some reason why he won’t be able to. We’re about to find out how deep the corruption goes.”
“Indeed,” Musk replied.
Indeed
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 16, 2022
The Twitter board on Friday announced the adoption of a “poison pill,” intended to stop Musk’s efforts to buy the company by diluting his shares. The Daily Wire reported:
The board has adopted a “limited duration shareholder rights plan,” which gives Twitter’s existing shareholders, except Musk, time to purchase additional shares at a discount, Axios reported Friday.
The desired effect is clearly to dilute Musk’s holding in the company, and make the cost of a takeover higher or even prohibitive.
“A poison pill, devised by law firms in the 1980s to protect companies from corporate raiders, essentially lets a takeover target flood the market with new shares or allow existing shareholders other than the bidder to buy them at a discount,” The New York Times explained. “That means anyone trying to acquire the company must negotiate directly with the board.”
The pill will be activated “once any individual or a group of people working together buy 15 percent or more of Twitter’s shares,” the Times noted.
Musk earlier in the week offered to buy 100% of Twitter at $54.20 per share in cash — a deal that could exceed $40 billion, The Daily Wire reported.
The entrepreneur stressed in a formal letter to Twitter’s Chairman of the Board Bret Taylor that he believes the platform should be used to proliferate the principle of free speech, an SEC filing revealed.
“Free speech is a societal imperative for a functioning democracy” Musk wrote, adding that this was his “best and final offer.”
The Daily Wire is one of America’s fastest-growing conservative media companies for breaking news, investigative reporting, sports, podcasts, in-depth analysis, books, and entertainment for a reason: because we believe in what we do. We believe in our country, in the value of truth and the freedom to speak it, and in the right to challenge tyranny wherever we see it. Believe the same? Become a member now and join our mission.
Source: Dailywire