I don't think it's quite that simple. After the offer was submitted he famously tried hard to NOT buy Twitter. In the end his attempts to back out of the purchase because of the supposed undisclosed bot problem were thrown out in court, but iirc he could still have pulled out by paying "only" a couple billion dollars in fines or something. I guess it comes down to "do you believe Elon Musk when he says something" and plenty of people understandably didn't.
That doesn't make them "literally illiterate" though.
> but iirc he could still have pulled out by paying "only" a couple billion dollars in fines or something.
That clause was clearly for things outside of Elon (or former Twitter)'s control. Like if a government stepped in to stop the purchase.
Elon never had a good counter argument. So it was simply a case of those who were able to read the public court documents vs the ones who believed Elons out-of-court media blitz.
Alas, the only arguments that matter in court are the arguments that are filled in court. None of the discussion points you talked about even made it to the case, they were laughed out long before Elon gave up and bought Twitter.
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Reading. It's a superpower. That's what the past year has taught me. A surpring number of people cannot read and will believe falsehoods even if they contradict written and agreed upon documents.
The biggest winners were those who short sold Tesla, knowing that Elon would be forced to sell Tesla stock to afford a $44 Billion purchase (even if $13 Billion was covered in loans and maybe $9 Billion in handshake agreements with other investors like Saudis or Larry Ellison etc. Etc.)
If you short sold Tesla and bought TWTR in preparation for the buyout event, you'd have made even more money. Etc. Etc. And some people did do that.
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Anyway. AMC/APE was the more recent event a few weeks ago proving the illiterate stock market traders. It's happening again and again. Tons of opportunities exist if you have the ability to read, and comprehend, the public legal text. This is absolutely not a thing typical traders can do, the price fluctuations are proof of that.
I dunno what the next event will be, but I'm keeping my eyes open for easy money.
Apart from the last paragraph, it’s a good debunking of that tired “he could have pulled out just by paying 1B$” meme. He could not, and this has been explained in quite a lot of detail on every public forum I have seen at the time.
“My man” itself is also obnoxious and condescending.
It doesn’t sound like you’re comprehending the level of reading comprehension that dragon tamer is capable of. They can literally read a sentence, understand it, and then take action, making easy profit.
Which in the context of modern anti-intellectualism makes a lot of sense it’s not unlike calling Y equals MX plus B machine learning. Soon arrogance will mean being able to form a complete sentence.
>iirc he could still have pulled out by paying "only" a couple billion dollars in fines or something.
He couldn't have. That clause protected Twitter, not him. It ensured Twitter would still get something in case outside forces, like government regulators or financing falling through, prevented the deal. It did not give Musk the right to pay a penalty and back out.
Twitter explicitly reserved the right to sue for specific performance, i.e. to force the deal through rather than merely getting damages. Musk explicitly signed away any rights to investigate or back out. Twitter was honest and forthright so any fraud claims were nonsense. Musk didn't have a leg to stand on, legally or factually.
The most he could have done was tie things up in court. But the courts can throw out bad-faith lawsuits pretty quickly.
The other guy you're talking to is being a dick. There was a concerted disinformation campaign from Musk and friends, and the papers were not willing enough to call "bullshit" on the front page. The truth was out there but hardly staring you in the face.
But hedge funds have teams of lawyers reading this stuff all day long. They have no excuse for not seeing through Musk's chicanery.
> and the papers were not willing enough to call "bullshit" on the front page. The truth was out there but hardly staring you in the face.
It kinda was, though. A bunch of lawyer-reacts at the time basically were "this isn't financial advice, but lol Musk is fucked and the Delaware court doesn't screw around or delay"
That doesn't make them "literally illiterate" though.