Elon Musk’s X is worth less than half of price he paid for Twitter
X, THE platform formerly known as Twitter, is worth less than half of what Elon Musk paid for it a year ago.
Restricted stock units awarded to employees value the company at US$19 billion, or US$45 a share, according to a source familiar with the matter. A year ago, Musk bought Twitter for US$44 billion.
Since the takeover, most of Twitter’s staff was laid off or resigned. Musk renamed the company X, changed some of its content rules and lost more than half of its advertising revenue.
Fortune earlier reported on the valuation, citing an internal memo.
The company has struggled financially under Musk’s ownership. At the time of the takeover, Twitter was valued at US$44 billion, based on a mix of debt and equity. Musk’s purchase saddled the company with US$13 billion in debt and over time his erratic decision-making and looser content-safety rules have driven away advertisers, contributing to a 60 per cent drop in sales. X also owes about US$1.2 billion in interest payments per year on its debt, Bloomberg earlier estimated.
Musk’s plan for X is to shift away from advertising towards paid subscriptions. But so far the company has persuaded less than 1 per cent of users to sign up for its monthly premium service, translating to less than US$120 million annually, Bloomberg has estimated.
Musk has also been vocal about turning X into an “everything app” that could generate revenue from features such as shopping and payments. The company rolled out audio and video calling earlier this month, has a beta version of a hiring service and announced plans to launch a news wire. Musk told employees that X plans to compete with Google’s YouTube, Microsoft’s LinkedIn and Cision’s PR Newswire.
When chief executive officer Linda Yaccarino met with bankers this month to lay out the company’s financial plan, she shared ideas for X’s new products and services, including the launch of advertising tiers. In the past, Musk has hinted that he would like to take X public, but the company’s steep drop in value could make that difficult. BLOOMBERG
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