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Elon Musk’s Twitter Deal: Valuation and Financing of the Leveraged Buyout
On April 14, 2022, Elon Musk offered to buy Twitter Inc. for US$54.20 per share, for a total cost of US$44 billion. Musk hoped to make the social media network a platform of free speech, and the company profitable and cash flow-positive far more quickly than its management team at the time. Musk’s leveraged buyout was mainly funded by a margin loan backed by his own shares in his company, Tesla Inc. On July 8, 2022, Musk announced that he was backing out of the deal. Almost immediately, a lawsuit was filed to force Musk to close the deal as required by the merger agreement. In response, Musk had to decide whether his bid of US$54.20 per share was still a fair valuation for the purchase, if a leveraged buyout with a margin loan was the best financing plan, and whether to confirm or abandon his agreement to buy Twitter Inc. If he chose to walk away from the deal, he would have to consider the potential loss, depending on the outcome of the pending lawsuit in the Delaware Court of Chancery. -
Elon Musk’s Twitter Deal: Valuation and Financing of the Leveraged Buyout - Student Spreadsheet
Student spreadsheet for product W30166. -
Elon Musk’s Twitter Deal: Valuation and Financing of the Leveraged Buyout - Instructor Spreadsheet
Instructor spreadsheet supporting product W30167.