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by ceejayoz 1477 days ago
They'd sue for the $1B cancellation fee, I'd imagine.
1 comments

FFS, this exact thread points out that there is no $1B cancellation fee.
Incorrectly.

> The Merger Agreement also provides that Twitter, on one hand, or Parent and Acquisition Sub, on the other hand, may specifically enforce the obligations under the Merger Agreement, except that Twitter may only cause Mr. Musk’s equity financing commitment to be funded in circumstances where the conditions to Parent’s and Acquisition Sub’s obligations to consummate the Merger are satisfied and the debt and margin loan financing is funded or available. As described above, if the conditions to Parent’s and Acquisition Sub’s obligations to complete the Merger are satisfied and Parent fails to consummate the Merger as required pursuant to the Merger Agreement, including because the equity, debt and/or margin loan financing is not funded, Parent will be required to pay Twitter a termination fee of $1.0 billion.

https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1418091/000119312522...

Ugh, yes, nobody is disputing that. The comment I replied to was using the common, but incorrect, understanding of that to be like a fee that musk would have to pay to cancel the deal, which is pointed out as being an incorrect understanding (and which the text that you quoted also points out is an incorrect understanding). Like, of course, if we just change the meaning of words, then things stated in response to those words may be incorrect.
Correct. It is not a cancellation fee. Musk cannot cancel the contract, only a court can make that determination after concluding that Musk is unable to finance the deal.

I am not a lawyer so I am quite curious as to how that plays out.

Assuming he has it, could the courts force him to sell $40B in assets?

> Assuming he has it, could the courts force him to sell $40B in assets?

In principal, courts could either order him to complete the buyout (specific performance) or make those injured by his failure to do so whole (money damages). If they chose the former and he continued to fail to do so, he could be punished for contempt of court, either civil contempt (including, e.g., progressive fines and/or imprisonment until and unless he complied) or criminal contempt (fines or imprisonment of a set amount of period.)

https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/0001418091/000119312...

Do a search for "Parent Termination Fee".

TL;DR: There is indeed a $1B termination fee.

The fee is to be payed by Musk if the deal falls through for a few soecific reasons: either his financing falls through or a few other conditions (for example, USA blocks the deal).
doesn't seem fair for either party to have to pay a fee if USA blocks the deal.
Doesn't seem fair to shareholders to initiate a buyout procedure that doesn't go anywhere - there is a significant cost to the company because of the pending offer. The same can't be said for the party that initiated the offer. So, the party that initiates the offer also has to include the chance of regulatory action blocking the deal in their estimates, and decide if paying $1B in that contingency is worth. Musk certainly did, or else he wouldn't have signed the contract.

For example, in the case of this acquisition, it seems almost impossible for the government to step in - so, the expected value (in the probability theory sense) of the downside is close to 0.

Do a search in the same document for "Specific Performance".