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Abstract:By Krystal Hu, Anirban Sen and David French
div classBodysc17zpet90 cdBBJodivpBy Krystal Hu, Anirban Sen and David Frenchp
pReuters – “My offer is my best and final offer.”pdivdivdiv classBodysc17zpet90 cdBBJodiv
pElon Musk‘s 43 billion bid for Twitter takes a page out of Warren Buffett’s takeitorleaveit playbook. But investment bankers, investors and analysts said he needed a blowout bid and more details on his financing for this strategy to work. They added that Musks track record of reversing his positions also weighs against him.p
pBuffett is known for clinching large deals through his conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway Inc, such as the 11.6 billion deal to buy property and casualty reinsurer Alleghany Corp and his 37 billion acquisition of aerospace equipment maker Precision Castparts Corp, by making only one offer and refusing to negotiate. p
pThese offers were viewed as fair by their acquisition targets and were backed by committed financing from Berkshire Hathaway. Musks bid, on the other hand, was deemed too low by the market and too thin on financing details. p
pIn 2018, Musk, who is the chief executive and a cofounder of luxury electric carmaker Tesla Inc, tweeted that there was “funding secured” for a 72 billion deal to take Tesla private but did not move ahead with an offer. He and Tesla each paid 20 million in civil fines, and Musk stepped down as Teslas chairman to resolve U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission claims that he defrauded investors.p
p“Warren has demonstrated over 40 acquisitions in 60 years that when he says something, he does it. His word has enormous value. With Elon, I wouldn‘t trust him, … there’s no reliability there,” said Lawrence Cunningham, a law professor at George Washington University who has written extensively on Buffett.p
pMusk and Buffett did not respond to requests for comment.p
pMusk‘s cash offer of 54.20 a share, which values the company at 43 billion, represents a 38 premium to Twitter’s April 1 close, the last trading day before his 9.1 stake in the social media platform was made public. But it is lower than where Twitter shares were trading as recently as November. For most of 2021, the shares traded at more than 60.p
pUninvolved investment bankers say the closest comparison would be PayPal Holdings Inc‘s offer for Pinterest Inc, which the payments firm withdrew last October after a negative investor response to its interest. The offer valued Pinterest at 17.4 times sales. By comparison, Musk’s offer values Twitter at only 8.6 times sales.p
pTwitter shares ended trading on Thursday at 45.08, a 1.75 drop since Musk unveiled his 54.20 per share offer, reflecting wide investor skepticism that a deal will happen.p
p“I don‘t think the Twitter board will have a really hard time saying no to this deal. It’s not an excessive premium and its not excessively valued now,” said Chris Pultz, portfolio manager for merger arbitrage at Kellner Capital.p
pA Twitter spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.p
pFINANCING DETAILS THIN p
pMusk sold more than 15 billion worth of his Tesla shares last year, about 10 of his stake in the electric car maker, partly to settle a tax obligation. p
pIt‘s not clear how much of that Musk now has available for a Twitter bid, and it’s possible that he could sell more Tesla shares or borrow against them. He provided no details about his financing in a regulatory filing on Thursday. p
pA leveraged buyout is typically 60 to 80 financed with debt, so Musk would likely have to come up with an equity check of at least 10 billion. He could get partners, such as private equity firms, to help fund his contribution. p
pAnother question is banks‘ willingness to provide debt for the deal given the uncertainty of how Twitter would be run if owned by Musk. He has criticized Twitter’s current management but he has not disclosed who the replacement would be. He has also spoken against Twitter‘s relying on advertising, despite its comprising the majority of its revenue. Morgan Stanley is Musk’s lead bank working on the bid.p
pMusk said in the offer letter that he would reconsider his position as a shareholder if Twitter rejects his offer. Later on Thursday, however, he hinted at the possibility of a hostile bid whereby he would bypass Twitters board. p
pHe tweeted that Twitter shareholders should get to vote on the deal and posted a poll asking for Twitter users opinion on the subject. Typically, a company will put a deal to a shareholder vote only once its board of directors has approved it.p
pIf Musk is willing to make another offer despite calling his first bid “best and final,” analysts said his chances for a deal would improve significantly, given his resources as the worlds richest man.p
p“The board could see a case to reject the first offer and explore options for a higher price,” Justin Post, analyst at Bank of America, wrote on Thursday.p
p
pp Reporting by Anirban Sen in Bengaluru, Krystal Hu and David French in New York Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and Leslie Adlerp
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