The little bird will not let it go.
Twitter, which had said on Thursday "examining" Elon Musk's offer, responded to him this Friday, in its own way: the company announced measures to counter the offensive.
It has included a clause, nicknamed "poison pill" in financial jargon, which is automatically triggered when a shareholder has at least 15% of the company's capital without the agreement of the board of directors.
The plan must "reduce the possibility that any entity, person or group will take control of Twitter by accumulating securities in the market without paying all shareholders an appropriate premium or without giving the board sufficient time to make informed decisions,” the group said in a statement.
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Elon Musk owns just over 9% of Twitter's capital at this stage.
If he buys back enough shares to reach the 15%, all the other holders of shares on the platform will be able to buy them back at a reduced price, which would greatly increase the price the entrepreneur would have to pay to get his hands on the social network.
Elon Musk ready to shell out $43 billion
This Twitter announcement shows that the San Francisco-based company intends to fight against this attempt by the richest man in the world to buy it out and make it an unlisted company.
The whimsical billionaire has announced a proposal to acquire the social network at a price that would value it at 43.4 billion dollars, against around 36 billion at present.
He said Thursday he had "sufficient funds", assured that he had a plan B if the Board refused his offer, and also that he was not looking to "make money", during a live interview at the Ted2022 conference.
Very critical of Twitter's content moderation policy, he says he wants to make it "the platform for freedom of expression in the world", with fewer limits on what users can tweet.