Elon Musk says he’s ‘excited’ about buying Twitter, but ‘obviously overpaying’

A US judge has given Elon Musk and Twitter until Oct 28 to finalise the on-again, off-again megadeal. PHOTO: AFP

SAN FRANCISCO - Billionaire Elon Musk on Wednesday said he is “excited” about taking over Twitter, expressing enthusiasm even though he has spent months trying to break free of the US$44 billion (S$62.7 billion) buyout contract.

A United States judge early this month suspended litigation in the saga over Mr Musk’s proposed takeover of Twitter, giving the parties until Oct 28 to finalise the on-again, off-again mega deal.

Twitter had filed a lawsuit to hold Mr Musk to the terms of the deal he inked in April after the Tesla chief sent word he was terminating the contract.

“I am excited about the Twitter situation,” Mr Musk said while fielding questions on a Tesla quarterly earnings call.

“I think it is an asset that has just sort of languished for a long time but has incredible potential, although obviously myself and the other investors are overpaying for Twitter right now.”

Mr Musk added that he believes Twitter has the potential to be worth “an order of magnitude” more than it is now.

Delaware Judge Kathaleen McCormick granted a request by Mr Musk to freeze the case despite bitter opposition from Twitter, and said that a trial originally set for this week could be rescheduled for next month if a deal is not finalised.

With the trial on Twitter’s breach-of-contract suit against Mr Musk looming, the unpredictable entrepreneur had done an about-face, reviving his takeover plan on condition that the court halt the lawsuit against him.

Mr Musk began to step back from the Twitter deal soon after it was agreed upon, and said in July he was cancelling the purchase because he was misled by Twitter concerning the number of fake “bot” accounts, allegations rejected by the company.

Twitter, meanwhile, has sought to prove that Mr Musk was contriving excuses to walk away – simply because he changed his mind.

Mr Musk’s potential stewardship of the influential social media site has sparked worry from activists, who fear he could open the gates to more abusive and misinformative posts. AFP

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