Elon Musk Twitter Deal Completed, CEO Parag Agrawal and CFO Segal Fired
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Trump
Starts Rival Media Co
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Musk
tweets ‘the bird is freed’ after closing $44 billion deal and ousting CEO Parag
Agrawal and CFO Ned Segal
Elon Musk fired several Twitter Inc.
executives after completing his takeover
of the company, according to people familiar with the
matter, capping an unusual corporate battle and setting up one of the world’s
most influential social-media platforms for potentially broad change.
Mr. Musk fired Chief
Executive Parag Agrawal and Chief Financial Officer Ned Segal after the deal
closed, the people said. Mr. Musk also fired Vijaya Gadde,
Twitter’s top legal and policy executive, and Sean Edgett,
general counsel. Spokespeople for Twitter didn’t comment.
Hours after those
actions, Mr. Musk tweeted: “the
bird is freed” in a seeming reference to Twitter, which has
a blue bird as its logo.
Mr. Musk first agreed
to buy Twitter in April for $44 billion, then threatened to
walk away from the deal, before reversing course again this month and committing
to see through the acquisition. He previously indicated unhappiness with some
of the top ranks at Twitter, at one point responding to a tweet from Mr.
Agrawal with
a poop emoji. He also used
the site to mock Ms. Gadde, the top
legal boss, tweeting an image overlaid with text that repeated allegations
Twitter had a left-wing political bias.
It wasn’t immediately
clear who would step into the top positions left vacant by Thursday’s exits.
CNBC earlier reported the departures of Mr. Agrawal and Mr. Segal.
The deal, in which
Twitter will again become a private company, adds to Mr. Musk’s expansive
business reach, which also includes running Tesla Inc., the world’s
most-valuable car company, and rocket company Space Exploration Technologies
Corp., or SpaceX, among other endeavors. Mr. Musk,
who had become Twitter’s
largest individual shareholder, previously said he would
pay for the acquisition mostly with cash, some contributed by co-investors, and
$13 billion in debt.
There were signs this
week indicating that Mr. Musk was moving closer to acquiring the social-media
platform by Friday’s 5 p.m. deadline. Banks started
sending money backing the deal, The Wall Street Journal
reported. Mr. Musk also has changed his Twitter bio to “Chief Twit,” showed
himself walking
into the San Francisco headquarters of the social-media
platform, and issued a statement on Twitter explaining his vision for the site
to advertisers.
Closing the deal ends
a monthslong saga of whether Mr. Musk would or wouldn’t purchase the company.
The deal also puts one of the world’s most prominent social-media platforms
under the control of the world’s richest person, with implications for the
future of online discourse.
A self-described
free-speech absolutist, Mr. Musk has pledged to limit content moderation in favor of emphasizing free speech. However, that approach
risks causing conflicts with some advertisers, politicians and users who would
prefer a more moderated platform.
In a message to
advertisers on Twitter on Thursday, Mr. Musk said he was buying the company to
“have a common digital town square, where a wide range of beliefs can be
debated in a healthy manner.” He said Twitter “cannot
become a free-for-all hellscape, where anything can be said
with no consequences!”
Mr. Musk said the
platform must be “warm and welcoming to all” and suggested Twitter could let
people “choose your desired experience according to your preferences, just as
you can choose, for example, to see movies or play videogames ranging from all
ages to mature.”
Mr. Musk’s decision
to go through with the Twitter takeover came two weeks before a trial in
Delaware was set to begin over the stalled deal. The judge presiding over the
legal clash agreed
to pause the litigation, granting a request by Mr. Musk for more
time to complete the takeover. The judge gave Mr. Musk until Oct. 28 to follow
through with his offer, or said she would
schedule a November trial.
Mr. Musk offered in
April to buy Twitter for $54.20 a share—higher than the company was valued at
the time. In the months since the deal was struck, Twitter has faced efforts by
Mr. Musk to abandon the deal, a whistleblower complaint in which Twitter’s former
head of security accused the company of security and privacy problems, and
unsuccessful talks to negotiate a lower price with Mr. Musk.
Mr. Musk’s takeover leaves
big questions over the future of the platform, including how
he might revamp its business model and how he might implement
changes he has proposed for the way it polices content.
Like other
social-media companies, Twitter heavily
relies on digital advertising and has faced headwinds in
recent months due to broad economic uncertainty. It will also be
saddled with billions in debt as a result of the deal,
and payments on those loans will add costs for a company that has posted a loss
in eight of its past 10 fiscal years.
The deal turned into
a wild business drama with little precedent. Mr. Musk moved to buy Twitter in
April. After signing a merger agreement, however, he accused the company of
misrepresenting the prevalence
of fake and spam accounts on its platform, which Twitter denied.
He formally tried to
abandon the deal in July, prompting Twitter to sue him to enforce the original
merger agreement. Mr. Musk countersued.
In early October, Mr.
Musk suddenly abandoned his legal battle with Twitter, with little public
explanation. After his reversal, he tweeted that “Buying Twitter is an
accelerant to creating X, the everything app.” He previously suggested he could
create a social-media platform named X.com if he didn’t buy Twitter.
Eric Talley, a law
professor at Columbia University, said after the most recent about-face that
several factors were piling up against Mr. Musk, including rulings from the
court denying some of Mr. Musk’s discovery requests. Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick, who
was overseeing the case in Delaware, had called some of his data
requests “absurdly broad.”
“He has spent months
with various attempts to figure out ways out of this deal,” Mr. Talley said.
“All those windows had started to close and some of them closed completely.”
Mr. Musk’s specific
plans for the company remain unclear. He could
return Twitter to public ownership after just a few years, The
Wall Street Journal previously reported.
By taking Twitter
private, the billionaire entrepreneur likely can take more risks to jump-start
the company’s business. “It’s going to be bumpy,” said Youssef Squali, lead
internet analyst at Truist Securities. “He can take
it away for a couple of years, really kind of re-engineer the whole thing,” Mr.
Squali said.
Mr. Musk has
suggested he wants to shift Twitter away from its advertising-heavy business
model to other forms of revenue, including a greater emphasis on subscriptions.
Advertising accounted for more than 90% of Twitter’s revenue in the second
quarter of this year.
He said he would
allow former President Donald Trump
back on the platform, though Mr. Trump has said he doesn’t intend to return to
it. Twitter banned Mr. Trump in the wake of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack
on the U.S. Capitol, citing what the company called “the risk of
further incitement of violence.”
“Twitter is obviously
not going to be turned into some right wing nuthouse.
Aiming to be as broadly inclusive as possible,” Mr. Musk said in a message that
was among a trove released as part of the legal battle.
The prospect of Mr.
Musk taking over Twitter, as well as the subsequent uncertainty over the deal, roiled
many Twitter employees. Twitter has told employees that they
will hear from Mr. Musk on Friday, according to an internal note reviewed by
The Wall Street Journal.