Twitter’s value down two-thirds since Musk
takeover, says investor
Asset manager Fidelity reports that stake worth $20m
in October 2022 is now worth just under $6.6m
Alex Hern
UK technology editor
@alexhern
Wed 31 May
2023 17.55 BST
Twitter’s
value has plummeted by almost two-thirds since Elon Musk acquired the company in
October 2022, one of the social media company’s only remaining external
investors has admitted.
Fidelity,
an asset manager that held a stake in Twitter worth about $20m after Musk
acquired the business for $44bn, said in a corporate filing that its stake was
now worth just under $6.6m. That would value the overall company, now
officially called X Holdings Corp after Musk’s early venture X.com, at just
$14.75bn.
The fund
disclosed its holdings in its quarterly reporting on the performance of its
blue chip growth fund, which invests in a range of companies in the US and
around the world, focusing on household names with stable valuations. It also
owns a $386m stake in Musk’s privately held rocket company, SpaceX, and another
$849m in Tesla, which is publicly traded.
Twitter’s
valuation is of particular interest to the company’s staff, many of whom were
employed while it was publicly traded with compensation that included stock
options. Musk offered to value those options at about $20bn in March, according
to a Wall Street Journal report, an acceptance that the value of the company
had fallen by at least half since he took over.
That
valuation came with an incentive for Musk to lowball the estimate, however,
because the higher it was, the more expensive employee remuneration would be.
Fidelity, by contrast, has no such motivation for slashing the valuation
further still.
Since
taking over Twitter in 2022, Musk has instituted a wave of changes at a scale
rare for a company with the size and impact of the social network.
Some have
cut the company’s costs, including more than 10 waves of layoffs cutting its
headcount by more than 70% and a move to default on rent payments at offices
around the world. In London, the move prompted a lawsuit from the company’s landlord,
the crown estate.
Any
savings, however, appear dwarfed by the hit to revenues Musk’s chaotic
leadership has produced. Cuts to teams responsible for content moderation and
the closure of the site’s “verification” programme have prompted major advertisers
to pull spending. Its revenue dropped by almost half in the months after Musk
took over.
Musk
announced in May that he would be stepping down as chief executive, and that
Linda Yaccarino – an NBC advertising executive known as the “Velvet Hammer” for
her silky but tough negotiating style – would be taking over. Musk will stay on
as chair and will retain responsibility for the service’s technology and app.
.webp)
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