Las Vegas Review-Journal

Musk buys 9% stake in Twitter

Tesla CEO becomes largest shareholde­r of social media platform

- By Michelle Chapman and Tom Krisher

Tesla CEO Elon Musk acquired a 9 percent stake in Twitter to become its largest shareholde­r at a time when he is questionin­g the social media platform’s dedication to free speech and the First Amendment.

The ultimate aim of Musk’s 73.5 million share purchase, worth about $3 billion, is not known. Yet in late March Musk, who has 80 million Twitter followers and is active on the site, questioned free speech on Twitter and whether the platform is underminin­g democracy.

It’s unclear just when Musk bought the stake. A U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing made public on Monday says the event triggering the filing happened March 14.

Musk has also raised the possibilit­y with his massive and loyal Twitter following that he could create a rival social media network.

Industry analysts and legal experts say Musk could begin advocating for changes at Twitter immediatel­y if he chooses.

In a note to investors, CFRA Analyst Angelo Zino wrote that Twitter could be viewed as an acquisitio­n target because the value of its shares have been falling since early last year.

Jack Dorsey stepped down as CEO in November. Musk’s stake in Twitter is now more than four times the size of Dorsey’s, who co-founded the San Francisco company and had been the largest individual shareholde­r.

“Musk’s actual investment is a very small percentage of his wealth, and an all-out buyout should not be ruled out,” wrote Zino, who covers Twitter and social media.

Musk could see Twitter as an investment with big growth ahead, or he could have noninvestm­ent reasons for the purchase, such as buying to make sure the platform doesn’t restrain his speech, said Erik Gordon, a law and business professor at the University of Michigan.

“What he could be worried about is if enough of his tweets start to look like disinforma­tion, that Twitter says ‘we’re doing our job against disinforma­tion.’” Gordon said.

No CEO would refuse to take a call from the company’s top shareholde­r, so the purchase gives Musk access to Twitter’s top management, he said.

Musk has not spoken specifical­ly about how he would change rules at Twitter, but the social media platform’s history of suspension­s and bans is well documented.

Former President Donald Trump was banned from Twitter and other top social media platforms following the Jan. 6 Capitol riot last year that critics accused him of inciting. The ban has raised difficult questions about free speech in a social media industry dominated by a few tech giants — an issue that Trump and conservati­ve media have seized upon.

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Elon Musk

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