I wasn't speculating about someone ("myself") buying the whole company. I just meant anyone can buy through a brokerage at a lower value than Musk's offer. Actually, the Saudi dude and some others claim that Twitter is worth a lot more than $55 a share. So it's kinda weird. But I guess Vanguard in that sense put some money where their mouth is.
For the record, I only invest in companies that either make positive money or at least seem like they're about to start. IDK I haven't really considered TWTR
Twitter is a gateway for billions in Internet astroturfing dollars, meaning that... for pennies on the dollar.. a single owner could control, steer, manipulate or completely silence a lot of money and political power.
Add to that... the data collection involved, and Elon would potentially have doxx for every bad state actor on the Internet. It's more than about money.
Additionally, Twitter operates under secret intelligence directives in multiple countries. It's not just a propaganda apparatus, it's a espionage tool, reporting locations and Metadata ob all its users... even military and intelligence commu its users.
As to buying the stock? It's a coin flip. If the sale goes through, which it should by all measures, everyone who bought in early wins.
However, it looks like there is resistance and Vanguard, the Prince and their friends seem willing to lose money to hold Twitter, because their other clandestine assets that operate through Twitter and with its data are also on the line... but they can't admit that.
However, it looks like there is resistance and Vanguard, the Prince and their friends seem willing to lose money to hold Twitter, because their other clandestine assets that operate through Twitter
Now I see what your point was. I guess I'm dense. Thank you for elaborating on it though.
A corp that doesn't make money, doesn't have a plan to make money, but has a huge following and a huge market cap is operating outside the usual (well traditional anyways) parameters of collective investment. I understand pouring it all into growth, like Amazon did for a long time, and postponing your profits. But the endgame for Twitter investors doesn't seem like an eventual 30 or whatever years of stable profits. They're looking to get bought out or playing some other game entirely.
It's not that your dense, it's that this hasn't happened out in the open before, so we don't have precedent to guess the outcome.
If it was a sure thing, the price would have already risen to Elon's $52.00 price tag and hovered. The fact that didn't happen says it all. The opposite happened. Vanguard likely propped up the price along with friends so we don't even know how bad the bleeding really was.
However, it looks like there is resistance and Vanguard, the Prince and their friends seem willing to lose money to hold Twitter, because their other clandestine assets that operate through Twitter and with its data are also on the line... but they can't admit that.
Seems like in a just world, the people voting "no" on Elon's offer would have to buy out all the "yes" shareholders at $52 a share.
(post is archived)