Everything we don't know about Elon Musk's latest about-face on Twitter

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FILE - Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk arrives on the red carpet for the Axel Springer media award in Berlin on Dec. 1, 2020. Musk says he has lined up $46.5 billion in financing to buy Twitter, and he's trying to negotiate an agreement with the company. The Tesla CEO says in documents filed Thursday, April 21, 2022 with U.S. securities regulators that he's exploring a tender offer to buy all of the social media platform's common stock for $54.20 per share in cash. (Hannibal Hanschke/Pool Photo via AP, File)
Elon Musk says he'd like to buy Twitter for $44 billion — again. (Hannibal Hanschke / Associated Press)

Elon Musk wants to buy Twitter for $54.20 a share: A headline from April, yes, but also breaking news, with the on-again, off-again Silicon Valley saga looping back around on itself to end up, on the eve of a courtroom showdown, exactly where it started.

With a trial over the stalled merger set to begin Oct. 17, the Tesla billionaire proposed Monday evening to consummate his courtship of the social media platform at the original price he agreed to pay in April.

A sharp downturn in the stock market quickly made the $44-billion purchase price seem high, and it wasn't long before Musk sought to back out, saying Twitter had too many bot accounts and was not transparent about the issue.

Although many Twitter employees were leery of Musk, who openly disparaged them as lazy activists, the company's management had little choice but to take him to court or risk the wrath of its own shareholders.

The latest development suggests Musk has come to agree with the many observers who saw a Twitter victory as all but assured. "Buying Twitter is an accelerant to creating X, the everything app," he tweeted Tuesday.

But what changed his mind? Could he still see a way out of the deal? And what happens next for Twitter, either way?

Here’s what we still don’t know.

Will the deal go through?

After the events of the last six months, it may be hard to take Musk's latest proposal at face value.

Musk initially purchased a stake in Twitter without the necessary public disclosures, then agreed to join its board of directors, only to walk away from that agreement to pursue the acquisition he would soon be trying to halt. He has publicly criticized Twitter's executives, suggested they misled him and investors about the platform's problem with bots, or automated accounts, and mused that the service may be dying.

Wary of another reversal, Twitter has reportedly asked the Delaware Court of Chancery to superintend the closing.

Could Musk still find a way out?

It's conceivable. A letter from Musk's lawyers declared his intent to close the deal as originally agreed to in April, “pending receipt of the proceeds of the debt financing.”

That phrase could be significant. Musk's $44-billion offer included $13 billion of debt financing from banks, including Morgan Stanley, Bank of America and Barclays. Under the terms of the merger agreement, Musk could escape the deal by paying a $1-billion breakup fee if the bank financing falls through, said Ann Lipton, a law professor at Tulane University.

But there's a catch: That's only true as long as Musk is not determined to have sabotaged the financing or influenced the banks himself, Lipton said.