• Elon Musk’s Twitter acquisition ended up being the worst financing deal for banks since 2008, the WSJ said.
  • The $13 billion in loans Musk took out have been stuck on banks’ balance sheets.
  • The loans have cut into pay for bankers and lenders’ ability to finance other deals, the Journal reported.
  • @Blue_Morpho
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    153 months ago

    If Musk has to sell Tesla stock to pay back the loan, what does the bank care? There is something not being reported about the loan terms that they could lose money.

      • @Blue_Morpho
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        33 months ago

        Again why does the bank care? The article claims the bank gets interest and has Tesla shares as collateral. If Musk doesn’t pay they take the shares. So how are they losing?

        • @trolololol
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          03 months ago

          Boo hoo either Elon loses or the bank. Anyways.

          • @Blue_Morpho
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            23 months ago

            I was hoping for some details to explain the mystery.

            • @trolololol
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              13 months ago

              I’m curious too my popcorn is ready. I’m cheering for the “both can f themselves” side.

    • @AA5B
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      13 months ago

      The bank cares because

      • he can’t sell $13B in stock without crashing the value - he can’t pay it off fast
      • someone with that much ownership has serious restrictions on how they can sell. Again, limiting ability to pay off loans
      • banks generally don’t keep loans, they originate and sell. But no one will buy with those restrictions
      • @Blue_Morpho
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        13 months ago

        It was 2 years ago. Interest payments are continuous, not sudden. If he owed money he would sell a little every month to pay the loan. Yes it would lower the price. The bank doesn’t care, they are being paid.

        Yes large ownership sales are filed quarterly. It’s not a surprise loan. The payments are due monthly.