Twitter Inc.’s shareholders are poised to approve the $44 billion takeover that Elon Musk is now trying to exit, according to people familiar with the matter, putting the deal’s fate in a Delaware judge’s hands as the social-media company tries to force the billionaire to follow through with the purchase in court.
Early votes show investors approving the deal by a wide margin, the people said, though there is always a chance that the results could change as shareholders can alter their votes through a meeting scheduled for Tuesday morning Pacific time.
Musk, the company’s largest shareholder with a roughly 10% stake, hadn’t voted his shares one way or another as of Monday afternoon and was unlikely to given that he has alleged that Twitter
TWTR,
breached the merger agreement, some of the people said. The agreement requires Musk to vote his shares in favor of the deal, though his support isn’t crucial if enough other investors back it.
Other big Twitter shareholders, including index-fund managers who together control roughly 20% of Twitter’s stock, are poised to support the deal, some of the people said.
Musk agreed in April to pay $54.20 a share for Twitter. The social-media company’s shares have been trading well below that since he tweeted in May that the deal was “on hold,” a prelude to his later move to back out of it. That means many shareholders stand to gain handsomely if the deal closes on its original terms. The stock closed Monday at $41.41.
An expanded version of this report appears on WSJ.com.
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