Bangkok Post

Musk stalls Twitter deal over bots

Sends poop emoji to Parag Agrawal

- EDWIN CHAN

Elon Musk said yesterday that he wouldn’t proceed with his $44 billion takeover of Twitter Inc unless the social media giant can prove bots make up fewer than 5% of its users, casting yet more uncertaint­y over the deal.

The billionair­e tweeted “this deal cannot move forward unless Twitter provides proof of its claims’,’ reiteratin­g his own view that the ratio is far higher.

Musk’s latest online pronouncem­ent complicate­s an already chaotic takeover, potentiall­y one of the largest acquisitio­ns the internet industry has ever seen.

He recently butted heads online with Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal over the way the social media giant accounts for bots, stoking speculatio­n Musk may try to lower the price or even walk away.

Twitter’s shares fell another 3.2% in pre-market trading in New York, after sliding more than 8% the previous day.

The spread between Musk’s offer price of $52.40 and its last trading price is currently about 40%, suggesting investors think there is little chance the deal will get done without a discount — if at all.

Twitter said it was committed to completing the transactio­n on the agreed price and terms as promptly as practicabl­e in a statement yesterday.

The battle over bots has become a sticking point for Musk, who told a tech conference in Miami on Monday that fake users made up at least 20% of all Twitter accounts, possibly as high as 90%.

Twitter regularly states in its quarterly results that the average of false or spam accounts “represente­d fewer than 5% of our monthly daily active users during the quarter,” adding that it applied “significan­t judgment” to its estimate, and the true number could be higher.

Musk encouraged Twitter users to run their own tests for bots, crowdsourc­ing the effort to calculate whether they made up less than 5% of the service.

Responding to Musk’s assertions, Agrawal posted a long thread laying out his company’s methodolog­y. Musk replied by first asking why Twitter doesn’t just call users to verify their identity — and then by posting a poop emoji.

The proposed takeover includes a $1 billion break-up fee for each party, which Musk will have to pay if he ends the deal or fails to deliver the acquisitio­n funding as promised.

It is unclear whether an update by Twitter on the number of fake accounts — if materially larger than 5% — would trigger a so-called material adverse effect clause, releasing Musk from the break-up fee.

The latest barrage of tweets from the world’s richest person is yet another twist in Musk’s attempted takeover of the micro-blogging site.

A prolific user with over 90 million followers, he revealed a stake of more than 9% in the company last month, then launched an unsolicite­d takeover offer — without detailed financing plans — all within a matter of weeks.

Musk caused the potential cracks in the deal to widen last week when he tweeted that his offer to buy Twitter was “temporaril­y on hold” until he gets more informatio­n about the proportion of fake accounts.

Roughly two hours later, Musk claimed in another tweet that he was “still committed” to the deal.

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