Twitter would be worth 20 billion, half less than in October

(New York) Elon Musk currently estimates the value of Twitter at 20 billion dollars, once morest 44 five months ago, when the social network was acquired by the entrepreneur, according to an internal document consulted by several American media.


The internal letter to employees concerned profit sharing within the San Francisco group and the allocation of shares in X Holdings, the company that has overseen Twitter since its takeover at the end of October.

The share grant program values ​​the platform at 20 billion dollars, close to the capitalization of Snap (18.2 billion), parent company of Snapchat, or the social network and creative site Pinterest (18.7), all two sides.

Solicited by AFP via the email address dedicated to the press, Twitter generated an automatic response containing only an emoji in the shape of a pile of excrement.

In the internal document, Elon Musk justifies the brutal contraction of the valuation by the financial difficulties experienced by the group, a time on the verge of filing for bankruptcy, according to him.

“Twitter was set to lose $3 billion a year,” Elon Musk wrote in a post on the platform on Saturday.

This figure is explained, according to him, by a loss of turnover of 1.5 billion dollars and maturities of debt of an equivalent amount.

“But now that advertisers are coming back, it looks like we’re going to break even in the second quarter” of 2023, said Twitter’s chief executive and majority shareholder.

Since taking control, Elon Musk has reduced the group’s workforce from 7,500 to less than 2,000 employees by resorting to successive waves of layoffs.

In the internal document, Elon Musk says he sees “a difficult but clear path” towards a valuation of the group around 250 billion dollars, without mentioning a deadline.

The man who is also at the helm of Tesla and the aerospace group SpaceX announced that Twitter would open a window every six months allowing employees of the social network to sell their titles, which are no longer listed.

Leave a Replay