|
|
|
|
|
by _djo_
1374 days ago
|
|
Well, no, because there's still no evidence that Twitter has lied in any of its filings, and because Musk intentionally waived due diligence which is the traditional way for a purchasing company to verify the actual state of the company it is buying. If, and only if, it turns out that Mudge's claims cause FTC action that would be severe enough to be defined as a material adverse effect, Musk may have some grounds to back out or reduce the price. But that's not yet clear. Remember, Twitter didn't want to be purchased. This was a hostile takeover, achieved by Musk going to Twitter's shareholders with an offer attractive enough that they were not going to refuse, forcing the board into accepting the offer. He then signed a binding offer and in his haste to force the deal waived due diligence. |
|
Twitter is its shareholders, not its managers.
I imagine it's the lawsuits that this will spawn which will justify backing out or significantly reducing the price. Users whose data was not properly kept, users whose governments (and maybe others) got to spy on them, ad buyers who were promised a certain number and class of viewers, shareholders upset about these things, etc.