San Antonio Express-News

Wall Street, tech investors put $7B into Musk Twitter bid

- By Tom Maloney

Elon Musk may be the world’s richest person, but that doesn’t mean he wants to put his massive fortune at risk to buy Twitter.

The Tesla co-founder restructur­ed his complex bid for the social-media giant by getting $7.1 billion in equity commitment­s from investors. He also cut in half the size of a record margin loan arranged last month with an array of investment banks.

As a result, Musk is significan­tly less exposed to any potential market volatility. Before, he needed Tesla to remain above about $837 a share for him to have the $62.5 billion to collateral­ize the $12.5 billion margin loan when it’s first funded. Now Tesla needs to trade above $419 for his available shares to be enough to secure the smaller, $6.25 billion loan.

The shift in the financing bolstered optimism that Musk can complete the transactio­n, for which he’s offering $54.20 a share. The stock climbed 2.7 percent to $50.36 in New York, even as U.S. equities tumbled. Tesla slid 8.3 percent to $873.28.

Musk’s $44 billion purchase of Twitter originally relied on $21 billion of equity that he has to come up with and $12.5 billion in margin loans secured by his Tesla stock.

After selling $8.5 billion of shares in the electric carmaker to help raise cash, it wasn’t obvious that his remaining stake would be sufficient to secure the margin loan. Even if it were, he’d be left covering an enormous debt load with his Tesla holdings levered to the hilt.

Musk already had more than half of his $134 billion Tesla position pledged to secure existing debt as of June, according to Tesla’s most recent proxy filing. The $12.5 billion margin loan would be secured by Tesla stock worth $62.5 billion — shares that could be sold by his lenders in the event that he defaulted.

Musk and his partners now have to come up with $27.25 billion in equity, according to a filing Thursday. He’s built his cash war chest by recently selling Tesla stock and has already amassed 9.6 percent of the social-media company.

Musk is worth about $250 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, but much of that fortune is illiquid and he has on occasion bemoaned being “cash poor.”

Along with the new commitment­s from investors including

Larry Ellison, Sequoia Capital and Qatar, Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal is rolling his $1.9 billion of Twitter stock into the privatized company. Musk is also trying to persuade Twitter founder Jack Dorsey to do the same with his stake.

Musk can continue seeking additional investors to close any potential financing gap.

One immediate benefit: Owning Twitter could now be significan­tly cheaper for him. The original margin loan was set to cost Musk about $500 million a year, depending on interest rates. That number now drops to about $250 million.

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