Tesla CEO Elon Musk. Source: Patrick Pleul/DPA via Reuters.
The Market Online - At The Bell

Join our daily newsletter At The Bell to receive exclusive market insights

  • The Board of Twitter has put up a hurdle in Elon Musk’s plan on buying the social media site
  • Twitter’s Board has created a poison pill, which will dilute anyone wanting a more than 15 per cent stake in the company by selling more shares to other shareholders at a discount
  • This plan was put in place a day after Musk made an offer to buy Twitter shares at US$54.20 (A$73.50) each, valuing the company at about US$41 billion
  • Musk has taken a swipe at the board of Twitter after they announced this poison pill saying that the board salary will be $0 if his bid is successful
  • Co-founder and former CEO Jack Dorsey has also called out Twitter’s Board on Saturday, saying “it’s consistently been the dysfunction of the company”

The Board of Twitter has indicated it is not interested in being bought out by the world’s richest man.

Members of the social media’s board has created a move that could prevent Elon Musk from buying it.

Twitter has created a shareholder rights plan, labelled as “poison pill,” which would make it harder and more expensive for the Tesla owner or any other potential buyer to purchase the site without board approval.

Under the plan, if Musk (or any other potential buyer) buys more than a 15 per cent stake in the company, Twitter will sell more shares to other shareholders at a discount.

Formally known as a shareholders rights plan, the poison pill will be in place for one year.

This plan was put in place a day after Musk made an offer to buy Twitter shares at US$54.20 (A$73.50) each, valuing the company at about US$41 billion.

Musk has now taken a swipe at the board of Twitter after they announced this poison pill

“Board salary will be $0 if my bid succeeds, so that’s ~$3M/year saved right there,” Musk tweeted in response to a user’s post criticising the board.

Musk also launched a poll on Thursday asking his 80 million followers if his takeover should be up to the shareholders and not the board, in which a large number responded yes.

Meanwhile, in a series of tweet replies, Co-Founder and former CEO Jack Dorsey called out Twitter’s Board on Saturday, saying “it’s consistently been the dysfunction of the company.”

Dorsey’s statement was a reply to a tweet by venture capitalist Garry Tan that said “The wrong partner on your board can literally make a billion dollars in value evaporate.”

More From The Market Online
AI concept

The great AI scare sell-off is still permeating Wall Street; a speculative blog from the not-so-distant future stands as the latest culprit

The ongoing tech sell-off in the United States, ironically driven by the larger AI thematic itself, continues to define
US and Aus flag

The XJO benefitted from geopolitical calm last week. New tariff fears perhaps feel more familiar

Last week, I wrote that the ASX200 was having a good week, where Australian investors were reacting to Australian earnings reports and how

Okay, so just where is gold heading? Experts say its nowhere near finishline yet

Leading industry, government and investment groups are still confident that the gold’s bull run is nowhere…
Koala share trading AI

The ASX 200 is up over 4% YTD. What EOY targets are floating around?

It’s been a pretty good year for the ASX200 so far, helped greatly by the ‘commodity supercycle’ narrative – which isn’t really a