It appears that is our job.It's not their job to speculate on Elon securing financing...
But you are putting the cart before the horse .... in numerous categories.
It appears that is our job.It's not their job to speculate on Elon securing financing...
Yea great except one is providing the paycheck and the other is rely on it.That had to do with a company employee and NDA's though. I may not agree with why a private company might terminate an employee, but I do agree with their right to do it that does not violate any civil rights protections (race, age, gender, etc). My state has a Right to Hire Right to Fire for any reason, same as the employee if they want to say, "Fuck off I quit," without notice or reason.
I don't have any experience in corporate governance, structure, or buyouts. My posts are all just my thinking and opinion on how I see it playing out. I understand your last point on why one would become a shareholder if they did not believe in the company, however one never has the luxury of hindsight, and company's boards can completely destroy a company's value over time. Shareholders also have the luxury of a former CEO saying as much about this current board in recent statements, along with its drop in value. Also a class action will be a lot harder to argue against than some random lawsuits from a few people. We will just have to let it play out at this point. Good points though.Unless he has 46 billion in cash or ironclad term sheets from lenders, his financing isn’t secured. Even if he did, he may not be willing to close on the transaction. Even if he was willing, other entities may not be willing to allow him (his contract with Tesla for example). These are things the board needs to vet before they commit to the transaction.
Have you ever done a corporate transaction before? I’ve done 5 and been a final contender for about 5 others. This is common for shareholders or their representatives to vet. Bids are rejected all the time by boards and the stocks fall and eventually recover or don’t. The boards rarely give a shit about short term traders or arbitrageurs.
building a model to justify the future price is easy. It would be incumbent on the shareholders suing the board to prove the board did not act in the interests of the shareholders. The burden is on the shareholders (which would make you think why they were shareholders in the first place if they didn’t think the stock was worth a lot more than it is now).
I’m wondering if you are rooting for Elon because of politics. Free speech has nothing to do with this transaction.
No one is afforded the luxury of free speech in the company they work for. Companies stipulate that employees are basically brand ambassadors for their company. They are privy to information others are not and their words and actions directly affect the brand. Their actions, words or otherwise, could be part of some larger scale project or test in the works, and divulging information could damage the brand.Yea great except one is providing the paycheck and the other is rely on it.
Can you say "holding something over someone's head"?
Free speech my azz.
Yeah mines all speculation, but unlike the board we have that luxury.It appears that is our job.
But you are putting the cart before the horse .... in numerous categories.
Unfortunately, past a certain percentage, somewhere in the single digits, you must disclose your percentage with the SEC and it becomes public knowledge. Then you have their board and the public watching you like a hawk. Elon's advantage here is that since he does not own over 10% he can legally liquidate his entire position all at once at any time without needing to file documentation first, essentially screwing the share price.Where Elon Musk made a mistake is he announced his intention way ahead of acquiring majority stake in Twitter. The smarter way to do it is let TWTR trade on its merits. If it goes down, do not even touch it and let it fall, fall and fall. When it bottoms out, that is when Elon Musk should buy some shares. Make it so that, it is in quantities that will not spike the share price, do like the hedge funds do. Slowly, accumulate your position without alarming the woke executives. Then, start removing the woke executives with your own allies since, you now have majority stake. These idiots just want to protect their woke ideologies and agendas. They do not care about enhancing shareholder value.
Unfortunately, past a certain percentage, somewhere in the single digits, you must disclose your percentage with the SEC and it becomes public knowledge. Then you have their board and the public watching you like a hawk. Elon's advantage here is that since he does not own over 10% he can legally liquidate his entire position all at once at any time without needing to file documentation first, essentially screwing the share price.
Liquidate it all, immediately short it big, other shareholders who only bought in because of Musk sell because he sold, others short knowing they will be selling also. Share price plummets. This is all contingent on another 'White Knight' investor(s) not buying it out to sustain the price.Musk can just short TWTR and accumulate a huge cash hoard to go after it again, later.
I don't have any experience in corporate governance, structure, or buyouts. My posts are all just my thinking and opinion on how I see it playing out. I understand your last point on why one would become a shareholder if they did not believe in the company, however one never has the luxury of hindsight, and company's boards can completely destroy a company's value over time. Shareholders also have the luxury of a former CEO saying as much about this current board in recent statements, along with its drop in value. Also a class action will be a lot harder to argue against than some random lawsuits from a few people. We will just have to let it play out at this point. Good points though.
Except the owner itself or largest shareholder of the voting shares. Like I said "holding something over another's head".No one is afforded the luxury of free speech in the company they work for....