3point14
Pi
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2005
- Messages
- 23,095
He is the sole owner of the company. There are no shares. There are no shareholders.
If he were a good businessman making a thoughtful purchase (neither is true), then he would have hit the ground running with a well-researched plan for how to turn the company profitable. Instead, he's asking randos on Twitter whether or not his ideas are good.
The company has been losing money for three years. Eventually, banks will stop letting Twitter float cash and then cuts will have to be made. There are still bills to pay, after all. Musk is not "personally" responsible for that in the sense that he will have to make up the difference out of his own pocket (though he is free to do so if he wishes). The worst that could happen to him is that the entire corp goes belly-up and his $44b purchase is worthless.
I'm not a business expert, so someone else feel free to correct any mistakes I made.
Private companies still have shares of stock. There is also a report upthread that he has 19 equity investors. Equity investment usually means they bought shares.
Thank you, both.