Business
Twitter shareholders approve $44 billion Elon Musk buyout
Twitter’s shareholders have voted to approve a proposed $44 billion acquisition by Elon Musk. Reports earlier suggested that a wide margin of approval was expected for the vote, with the required majority reportedly locked before the Tuesday meeting. On a call, Twitter confirmed that a preliminary count shows it has enough votes to approve the deal. Musk proposed a buyout of Twitter in April. Twitter has encouraged investors to accept it since then, even as Musk has filed numerous requests to terminate the agreement. Shareholders vote lets Twitter continue with a lawsuit intended to make Musk close the acquisition.
The approval means that Musk and Twitter will proceed to October trial in the Delaware Court of Chancery. Musk is set to argue that Twitter concealed important facts about its internal operations, including an alleged undercount of spam and bot accounts on the platform as well as details revealed by former Twitter security head Peiter “Mudge” Zatko. Twitter will push to close the deal regardless, alleging that Musk’s complaints are merely a pretext for backing out.

Meanwhile, Zatko’s revelations will likely continue to draw separate interest from regulators and lawmakers — including questions from members of Congress . The Verge
-
Economy1 day agoNigeria’s Digital Boom needs nuclear power partnerships for long-term success
-
News1 day agoCardoso formally receives Central Bank of the Year Award
-
Uncategorized1 day ago
June 12 Democracy Day declaration not enough, as citizens wallow in pain – ActionAid, FG declares Friday public holiday
-
Finance10 hours agoElon Musk becomes world’s first trillionaire as SpaceX shares soar on stock market debut
-
Stock Market10 hours agoFG to raise N4trn bond to settle electricity debt
-
Oil and Gas1 day agoNNPC is house of thieves, fraud; Kyari must be arrested dead or alive to account for N210 trillion—Oshiomhole
-
Oil and Gas1 day agoDangote Refinery seeks $1bn private placement ahead of planned listing
-
News1 day agoMiddle East Conflict sends global growth to lowest rate since COVID-19, WBG to Provide up to $100bn for Affected countries over 15 Months—WBG
