“Fidelity is currently valuing X at about $9.4 billion”

I found this funny.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 month ago

    The thing is, if the business shutters he no longer has to pay back that 13Bn, nor will he likely have to pay back a fair amount of the other debts.

    why would you think that? most of the money were his loans, not some 3rd party investors. why tf would he not have to pay back?

    • @atrielienz
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      11 month ago

      If he files for bankruptcy. Did you read the articles?

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        twitter filing for bankruptcy doesn’t absolve him of his loans. the loans are musk’s, not twitter’s.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 month ago

            ok, so that described strategy sounds almost like something that should be illegal. in fact it sounds very similarly to lot of stories that were happening here in central europe after fall of communism, when the state-owned companies were changing ownership and ending up in personal hands. lot of these stories did not end up well.

            but no matter what, that strategy only covered part of the acquisition price, even according to these articles, so that is still not a reason for musk to intentionally drive the company into the ground.

            • @atrielienz
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              21 month ago

              Insider trading is illegal. Tax fraud is illegal. There’s lots of things in the business world that have been deemed illegal including the theft of ideas that are trademarked, copyrighted or patented and businessmen steal those all the time and spend a lot of time looking for loopholes. The bottom line is that I can’t say with 100% certainty that this is exactly what’s going on but I can point to articles with analysis of the entire thing and see some distinct possibilities, and you can’t say for certain that that’s not what’s going on, unless you happen to work in the field and have information that I don’t.

              The other parts of the acquisition are covered by his own companies and the sale of his own stock. With the right insurance (the right contracts) he’d get a golden parachute that would make him whole without having to pay those back either. Golden parachutes are not only legal but also quite normal for CEOs. If Twitter were to end up bankrupt, he may not have to pay back the money he borrowed from Tesla or his other companies, and that leaves him having to pay back just the private parties. Depending on their agreement, that may be in stock options for all we know. Further allowing him to dump Tesla stock without selling it (which won’t effect Teslas valuation in a negative way).

              A house of cards is a house of cards. Things being illegal have never stopped this man before.