Shares in Twitter have been suspended following a report that Elon Musk has offered to push ahead with a $44bn (£38bn) acquisition of the platform after performing a dramatic U-turn on his decision to walk away from the deal.
Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that the Tesla chief executive had written to Twitter offering to close the deal at the original price of $54.20 a share. Shares in the social media site climbed more than 12% to $47.93 in New York before trading was halted.
Musk had been set for a courtroom showdown with Twitter on 17 October, with multiple legal commentators warning he had a slim chance of succeeding in his attempt to scrap the deal.
The microblogging platform has been demanding that Musk, the world’s richest man, complete the deal under terms agreed in April. It is suing him in Delaware, the state where Twitter is incorporated and which has a strong legal reputation for enforcing merger agreements.
The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday that Musk had made the proposal to Twitter’s lawyers overnight on Monday and had filed a letter with the Delaware chancery court before an emergency hearing on the deal on Tuesday.
However, Twitter is unlikely to act on the proposal for at least another day, according to a report in the Washington Post. It said such is the level of mistrust between both sides, Twitter is questioning whether the move is a legal gambit on Musk’s part.
Anat Alon-Beck, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University in Ohio, said Musk appeared to be “finally listening to his lawyers”. Musk is due to be questioned under oath by Twitter lawyers on Thursday and Friday as part of preparations for the Delaware trial. “He will be a fool to not at least try to buy the company now and avoid [a
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