Elon Musk invited legal scrutiny by tweeting out his doubts about a $44 billion Twitter bid

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Tesla (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk’s early Friday morning tweet proclaiming that his $44 billion bid to buy Twitter (TWTR) is on hold may violate laws meant to protect public markets from manipulation, experts say.

Twitter shares began sliding following the tweet, broadening a wider than usual margin over the past two weeks between the market price and Musk's offer price of $54.20 per share. The slide could give regulators and shareholders more reasons to go after Musk, on top of ongoing disputes with the Securities and Exchange Commission and with Tesla and Twitter shareholders.

“Twitter deal temporarily on hold pending details supporting calculation that spam/fake accounts do indeed represent less than 5% of users,” Musk tweeted along with a link to a Reuters report on Twitter's calculation, which came in a recent SEC filing.

Roughly two hours later, though, he tweeted, “Still committed to acquisition.”

Twitter post to Tesla CEO Elon Musk's handle May 13, 2022
Twitter post to Tesla CEO Elon Musk's handle May 13, 2022 · Twitter/Elon Musk @elonmusk

Musk has a long history of tweeting about corporate strategy, most notably alerting the public via Twitter in August 2018 that he had funding to take Tesla private at $420 share. The tweets prompted an SEC investigation and settlement, and experts say his latest tweet could invite more legal scrutiny. That's partly because information relevant for shareholders must be filed to the SEC; moreover, Musk's tweet arguably caused market moves in both Tesla and Twitter stock in a way that could benefit the Tesla CEO.

Speculation swirled Friday over whether Musk intended the tweets as a strategy to back out of the deal or alternatively to reopen negotiations to buy the company at a lower price after its shares dropped.

“Twitter is going to, and already is, dropping like a rock,” John Livingstone, a research fellow for Case Western Reserve University School of Law, told Yahoo Finance. “As for the SEC rules, this is definitely moving the market in a manipulative way, a way that Musk has been nailed for before by the SEC when he alleged he was taking Tesla private.”

Aside from Twitter's stock price, Tesla’s stock moves pose another potential problem. If Musk abandons the Twitter deal, it all but ensures that Tesla shares won’t be deployed as collateral to acquire the social media company, according to Livingstone. In that case, he says, Tesla shares could get an unfair boost and enrich Musk, who's a major shareholder.

If Tesla stock sees a spike, the SEC may be able to paint a picture that Musk used a deal with Twitter to drive down Tesla prices, only to then drive it back up by backing out of that deal.

Twitter post to Tesla CEO Elon Musk's handle May 13, 2022.
Twitter post to Tesla CEO Elon Musk's handle May 13, 2022. · Twitter/Elon Musk @elonmusk

Musk's mode of communication could also be problematic, as the SEC requires communications to shareholders be filed with the agency to ensure investors aren't misled. As of Friday afternoon, Musk's tweets had not been filed with the agency.