The Elon Musk-Twitter Saga Now Moves to the
Courts
Most legal experts say Twitter has the upper hand. But
Musk revels in brinkmanship.
By Lauren
Hirsch and Kate Conger
July 9,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/09/technology/twitter-elon-musk-lawsuit.html
Now that
Elon Musk has signaled his intent to walk away from his $44 billion offer to
buy Twitter, the fate of the influential social media network will be
determined by what may be an epic court battle, involving months of expensive
litigation and high-stakes negotiations by elite lawyers on both sides.
The
question is whether Mr. Musk will be legally compelled to stick with his
agreed-upon acquisition or be allowed to back out, possibly by paying a
10-figure penalty.
Most legal
experts say Twitter has the upper hand, in part because Mr. Musk attached few
strings to his agreement to buy the company, and the company is determined to
force the deal through.
But Mr.
Musk revels in impulsiveness and brinkmanship and is backed by a fleet of top
bankers and lawyers. Rather than engaging in a protracted public brawl with the
world’s richest man and his legions of die-hard followers, Twitter might come under
pressure to find a swift and relatively peaceful resolution — one that could
preserve the company’s independence but leave it in a tenuous financial
position.
Mike
Ringler, a partner at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom who is
representing Mr. Musk, informed Twitter late on Friday that his client was
abandoning the takeover. Mr. Ringler argued in his letter that Twitter had
violated the agreement with Mr. Musk by not providing him with detailed
information about how it measures inauthentic accounts. He also said that Mr.
Musk did not believe the metrics that Twitter has publicly disclosed about how
many of its users were fake.
Twitter’s
board responded by saying it intended to consummate the acquisition and would
sue Mr. Musk in a Delaware chancery court to force him to do so.
At the
heart of the dispute are the terms of the merger agreement that Mr. Musk
reached with Twitter in April. His contract with Twitter allows him to break
off his deal by paying a $1 billion fee, but only under specific circumstances
such as losing debt financing. The agreement also requires Twitter to provide
data that Mr. Musk may require to complete the transaction.
Mr. Musk
has demanded that Twitter give a detailed accounting of the spam on its
platform. Throughout June, lawyers for Mr. Musk and Twitter have wrangled over
how much data to share to satisfy Mr. Musk’s inquiries.
Mr. Musk’s
cold feet about the Twitter deal coincided with a huge slide in the valuation
of technology companies, including Tesla, the electric vehicle company he runs,
which is also his main source of wealth. Mr. Musk did not respond to a request
for comment.
Twitter
maintains that its spam figures are accurate, but has refused to publicly
detail how it detects and counts spam accounts because it uses private
information, like users’ phone numbers and other digital clues about their
identities, to determine whether an account is inauthentic. A Twitter spokesman
declined to comment on when Twitter planned to sue to enforce the merger
agreement.
“The outcomes
are: The court says Musk can walk away,” said David Larcker, a professor of
accounting and corporate governance at Stanford University. “Another outcome is
that he is forced to go through with the deal, and the court can enforce this.
Or there might be some middle ground where there’s a price renegotiation.”
For
Twitter, completing a sale to Mr. Musk is vital. It struck its deal with Mr.
Musk as technology companies were enjoying optimistic valuations; some, like
Snap and Meta, have now plummeted as they face advertising pressure, global
economic upheaval and rising inflation. Twitter’s stock has fallen about 30
percent since the deal was announced, and trades well under the Mr. Musk’s
offering price of $54.20 a share.
Legal
experts said Mr. Musk’s dispute over spam could be a ploy to force Twitter back
to the bargaining table in hopes of securing a lower price.
During the
deal-making, no other potential buyer emerged as a white knight alternative to
Mr. Musk, making his offer the best that Twitter is likely to get.
Twitter’s
trump card is a “specific performance clause” that gives the company the right
to sue Mr. Musk and force him to complete or pay for the deal, so long as the
debt financing he has corralled remains intact. Forced acquisitions have
happened before: In 2001, Tyson Foods tried to back out of an acquisition of
the meatpacker IBP, pointing to IBP’s financial troubles and accounting
irregularities. A Delaware court vice chancellor ruled that Tyson had to
complete the acquisition,
But legal
authority is different than practical reality. A lawsuit will probably cost
millions in legal fees, take months to resolve and add further uncertainty to
already jittery employees.
Deal
disagreements have often ended in settlements or renegotiations on price. In
2020, luxury giant LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton attempted to break up its
$16 billion deal to acquire Tiffany & Company, ultimately securing a
discount of about $420 million.
“This stuff
is a bargaining move in an economic transaction,” said Charles Elson, a
recently retired professor of corporate governance at the University of
Delaware. “It’s all about money.”
A lower
price would benefit Mr. Musk and his financial backers, especially as Twitter
faces financial headwinds. But Twitter has made clear it wants to force Mr.
Musk to stick to his $44 billion offer.
The most
damaging outcome for Twitter would be for the deal to collapse. Mr. Musk would
need to show that Twitter materially and intentionally breached the terms of
its contract, a high bar that acquirers have rarely met. Mr. Musk has claimed
that Twitter is withholding information necessary for him to close the deal. He
has also argued that Twitter misreported its spam figures, and the misleading
statistics concealed a serious problem with Twitter’s business.
A buyer has
only once successfully argued in a Delaware court that a material change in the
target company’s business gives it the ability to cleanly exit the deal. That
occurred in 2017 in the $3.7 billion acquisition of the pharmaceutical company
Akorn by the health care company Fresenius Kabi. After Fresenius signed the
agreement, Akorn’s earnings fell and it faced allegations by a whistle-blower
of skirting regulatory requirements.
Even if
Twitter shows that it did not violate the merger agreement, a chancellor in the
Delaware court may still allow Mr. Musk to pay damages and walk away, as in the
case of Apollo Global Management’s deal combining the chemical companies
Huntsman and Hexion in 2008. (The lawsuits concluded in a broken deal and a $1
billion settlement.)
Forcing an
acquirer to buy a company is a complicated process to oversee, and a chancellor
may not want to order a buyer to do something that he ultimately does not
follow through on, a risk that is particularly acute in this deal, given Mr.
Musk’s habit of flouting legal confines.
“The
worst-case scenario for the court is that it makes an order and that he doesn’t
comply, and they have to figure out what to do about it,” said Morgan Ricks, a
professor at Vanderbilt Law School.
While Mr.
Musk typically relies on a small circle of confidants to run his businesses,
which include the rocket maker SpaceX, he has brought in a larger legal team to
supervise the Twitter acquisition. In addition to his personal lawyer, Alex
Spiro, he tapped attorneys from Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom.
Skadden is
a go-to corporate law firm, with ample experience arguing cases in front of the
Delaware court, including LVMH’s attempt to break off its acquisition of
Tiffany.
On its
side, Twitter has deployed lawyers from two firms, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich &
Rosati and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, to manage the deal. Wilson Sonsini
is Twitter’s longtime legal counsel, which built its reputation on deals in
venture capital and technology. Simpson Thacher is a New York-based law firm
with more experience in general corporate mergers and acquisitions.
If Twitter
renegotiates its acquisition price or accepts a breakup, it will probably face
more legal problems. Shareholders would sue over either scenario, adding to
several shareholder lawsuits Twitter is already facing over the acquisition. In
April, financial analysts called Mr. Musk’s price a lowball offer, and Twitter
shareholders could balk if the company agrees to further reduce its acquisition
price.
A breakup
could also bring added legal scrutiny to Mr. Musk. The Securities and Exchange
Commission revealed in May that it was examining Mr. Musk’s purchases of
Twitter stock and whether he properly disclosed his stake and his intentions
for the social media company. In 2018, the regulator secured a $40 million
settlement from Mr. Musk and Tesla over charges that his tweet falsely claiming
he had secured funding to take Tesla private amounted to securities fraud.
“At the end
of the day, a merger agreement is just a piece of paper. And a piece of paper
can give you a lawsuit if your buyer gets cold feet,” said Ronald Barusch, a
retired mergers and acquisitions lawyer who worked for Skadden Arps before it
represented Mr. Musk. “A lawsuit doesn’t give you a deal. It generally gives
you a protracted headache. And a damaged company.”
Lauren
Hirsch joined the New York Times from CNBC in 2020, covering business, policy
and mergers and acquisitions. Ms. Hirsch
studied comparative literature at Cornell University and has an M.B.A. from the
Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth. @laurenshirsch
Kate Conger
is a technology reporter in the San Francisco bureau, where she covers the gig
economy and social media. @kateconger


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