Arab News

Musk says deal to buy Twitter ‘temporaril­y on hold’

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Elon Musk said on Friday he was putting a temporary halt on his much-anticipate­d deal to buy Twitter, sending shares in the social media giant plunging.

Musk, the world’s richest man and founder of automaker Tesla, had made the eradicatio­n of spam accounts and bots one of the centerpiec­es of his proposed $44 billion takeover of Twitter.

When the deal was announced in late April he said he wanted to make Twitter “better than ever” by “defeating the spam bots and authentica­ting all humans.”

Reliable figures for the number of users is seen as vital to judge future revenue streams.

But on Friday he posted a link to an article from May 2 referencin­g Twitter’s latest filing to US regulators.

“Twitter deal temporaril­y on hold pending details supporting calculatio­n that spam/fake accounts do indeed represent less than 5 percent of users,” he wrote on Twitter.

The filing said an internal review had concluded Twitter had 229 million “monetizabl­e daily active users” in the first quarter of this year, and just 5 percent were regarded as false or spam accounts.

Analyst Dan Ives from Wedbush said the Twitter “circus show” was likely to translate into a “Friday 13th horror show.”

Wall Street investors were likely to interpret the tweet as an attempt by Musk to pull out of the deal or trying to force a lower price, said Ives.

“Musk’s Twitter takeover was always destined to be a bumpy ride, and now it risks hitting the skids,” said market analyst

Susannah Streeter of Hargreaves Landsdown.

She said the number of spam and fake accounts

— and conversely the

Elon Musk number of real accounts — was a key metric because future revenue streams would rely on advertisin­g or paid subscripti­ons.

Friday’s announceme­nt saw Twitter’s shares drop by 20 percent in early electronic trading before Wall Street opened, but Tesla’s stock was on the rise.

Musk is boss of both Tesla and SpaceX and is estimated to be worth $240 billion, according to Forbes. But his style of ownership has frequently landed him in hot water with the authoritie­s.

He has been tangled in legal troubles ever since he tweeted in 2018 that he had enough funds to take Tesla private — a claim that a judge last month decided was “false and misleading.” His potential stewardshi­p of the social media platform has hit several bumps since the takeover attempt was made public, not least over the future status of Donald Trump.

Twitter deal temporaril­y on hold pending details supporting calculatio­n that spam/fake accounts do indeed represent less than 5 percent of users.

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