Yet Another Value Podcast - Lionel Hutz explains why Elon will own Twitter $TWTR
Episode Date: October 14, 2022Lionel Hutz, author of the excellent lionelhutz substack, comes on the podcast to talk about the ongoing drama with Twitter and Elon Musk. In this episode, we exclusively discuss the Twitter case as i...t stands on October 13th, the odds the deal closes at the end of the month, why it might not, and what happens if it doesn’t. If you’re looking for more background on the deal, please see my podcast from May with Evan Tindell or August with Professor Ann Lipton and Compound248.Lionel's Twitter: https://twitter.com/LionelHutz_EsqMay pod with Evan: https://twitter.com/AndrewRangeley/status/1529452942931238914?s=20&t=7yi3kr0wvPY0nduenfVdSAAugust pod with Ann and Compound: https://twitter.com/AndrewRangeley/status/1556987816894255106?s=20&t=LEFlc2kvhXZ_M59UhEj6NQChapters0:00 Intro2:30 Where we are today6:55 Dismissing CFIUS and Bot Outs9:20 Financing and Insolvency risks overview14:10 How could the banks pull out of financing?21:10 How would Elon's efforts over the next three weeks impact financing outs?26:45 Are Elon's hands too dirty at this point to use a financing out?29:10 How would an insolvency out play out?30:55 Does section 5.9 suggest Elon *must* make Twitter solvent at close?33:20 Judicial Estoppel / has Elon already repped TWTR is solvent?39:30 Piercing the veil / getting Elon to pony up all the money45:10 What does the trial process look like if Elon doesn't close now?48:45 What arguments and discovery get made at trial if Elon tries a financing out?52:15 What arguments and discovery get made if Elon tries an insolvency out?56:40 Closing timeline and the Tesla blackout window theory58:15 Would Elon's lawyers have supported the motion to stay if they weren't planning on closing?1:01:50 Why does Elon seem so scared of getting deposed?
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Hello, welcome to yet another value podcast. I'm your host, Andrew Walker. If you like this
podcast, it mean a lot if you could follow, rate, subscribe, review it wherever you're watching or
listening to it. With me today, I'm happy to have Lionel Hutz. Lionel's a recovering lawyer who
operates obviously under the pseudonym Lionel Huts. You're not getting the Simpsons character,
Lionel Hutz, unfortunately. But Lionel also writes the excellent Lionel Hutz substack. Lionel,
how's it going? It's going great. Thank you so much for having me on today.
Hey, thanks so much for coming on. Let me start this podcast the way I do every podcast.
First, disclaimer to remind everyone that nothing on this podcast is investing advice.
We're also going to be talking about a legal case today. Only one of us is a lawyer.
But even with one of us being a lawyer, I'll just remind everyone, this isn't legal advice.
either. So not legal advice, not investing advice. Second way I started your podcast is with a pitch for you, my
guess, you know, I've been pimping it out on my blog nonstop, but you write the Lionel Hut substack. I think
it's been excellent. Obviously, I found you because of your coverage of the Twitter case, but you've done
great work on, you've written up the Burford case, which I think is super interesting. I've done a
podcast there. You did a great write-up of that. You've been covering Go-Go a lot. I just think anybody who's
looking for quirky legal situations should go ahead, give it a follow, check it out.
included in the show notes.
All that out the way, today, we're going to be talking about my obsession, Twitter.
We're recording this on October 13th.
That's Thursday.
I'm hoping we get this out, October 14th, that's Friday.
Things have changed a lot.
We're only going to be talking about the case as it stands today, right?
So if you want to go talk about bots or you want to go talk about the trial before everything
that happened last week, I did two podcasts on this previously.
You can go listen to those podcasts.
as it stands today last week around October 7th or so, Elon Musk threw in the town, right?
He said, I'm not going to pursue this case anymore. I'm ready to close on Twitter.
Judge, if you stay this case, basically press pause on this case, I will close this deal by October 28th.
This being Twitter, you know, nobody, people think it's likely he closes, but people also think there's a pretty good chance he doesn't close.
And you can see that in the stock market.
As we talk, Twitter stock is at about 50.
The deal price is 5420.
If it closes on October 28th, like that's an 8% growth spread.
The IRA on that is so high, it's absolutely laughable.
So today, I think what you and I want to talk about is, hey, what are the odds that Elon Musk
closes this on October 28th?
And in the unlikely, but still very possible chance that he doesn't close October 28th,
why didn't he close?
What's his argument going to be going forward?
Where will this case be going forward?
So I have spoken a ton. I'm going to pause there and ask you, Lionel, what are the odds Elon
closes the deal on October 28th? And if he doesn't close the deal on October 28th, what's his
argument he's going to use for not closing? Well, first of all, thank you so much for that intro,
and for your legal coverage as well. It's been very in-depth for a non-lawyer. So I'm incredibly
impressed and looking forward to your future legal career. I appreciate that. I've been thinking
about going back to law school just based on this case and it's been so much fun and so stressful.
I don't know if you need to. I think you might qualify for the apprenticeship route at this point.
I think you need at least an honorary degree. I appreciate that.
But to your question of what are the chances that Musk closes? What are the chances that he closes by October 28th?
Look, my position, both from a legal analysis perspective and from my own personal account,
is that Musk is going to ultimately own Twitter.
One way or another, one version of history versus, there's no chance in my mind that Musk does not end up owning Twitter at some point in the future.
I think the likelihood that he closes by October 28th is fairly high.
Musk is fairly constrained at this point in the routes that he can go if he chooses to try to contest this further.
The routes that he can potentially go are really fourfold in my mind.
He could say that there is some issue with the debt financing.
he could say that there's an issue with the solvency of the new entity at closing.
He could try to go back and litigate his old claims, saying that, you know, this is still a bot issue.
There's still issues around Zatko's termination payments, etc.
or he could try to somehow invoke Scythus and I can't stress enough how meteorically stupid that would be
for him to try to go that route. But it's nonetheless a possibility because as you mentioned,
look, the spread is still a large one. And I think all the legal analysis says,
that it should not be as large of a spread as it is, but that the personality of Musk simply
cannot be ignored, which is the primary driver of that spread. There's really not a legal reason
behind it. It is Musk himself that is the reason for that additional, let's call it 7 to 8%
spread over where it should be. That's fantastic. I really want to talk to you about the two
most interesting aspects of the case. And I agree with you. There are four outs he could take.
The two craziest and least likely, I would say, are Sipheus. And just saying on October 28th,
hey, Judge, actually, I want to go fight on the MDAUs again. And if I could just quickly
sum them up, because I really want to talk to you about financing selflessly. Sipheus,
look, Elon Musk is a U.S. citizen. Sipheus is the committee for foreign investments into U.S.
companies. That is if a Chinese company is buying a semiconductor, right? Like Elon is a U.S.
citizen. He has security clearance from owning Starlink. Like for Sipheus to come and say that
Elon is a foreign agent. And everybody was tweeting about this because he allegedly had a phone
called Vladimir Putin. I just think it would be crazy for Sipius to all of a sudden in the next two or
three weeks say Elon's a foreign agent. And then the other thing is October 28th, he comes and says,
actually, Your Honor, I would like to have a trial about bots.
Like after this day, everyone I've talked to, the trial was already going badly for him.
But judicial esoppel, all this sort of stuff says, hey, you just got ready to close and said Twitter had one of his motions to say said Twitter had met all of their conditions, which basically waives the reps and warranties breach.
Like, yes, I mean, anyone can do anything or tried to do anything, right?
But everyone I've talked to has said, no, that's just a flat, you have lost.
I am sorry, sir.
So I'll let you comment on either of those two if you'd like to,
but I just wanted to put them away so we can focus on the juicy stuff.
No, I think that's a fair summary.
I think, yes, Sifias, he simply has too much to lose.
And on the bot issue or relitigating issue,
McCormick will not find that to be very funny.
I will find it to be very funny.
Yeah, it will certainly supply more material for additional articles.
And, you know, the many people,
I would be remiss to not mention the many people that have been covering this who have done a fantastic job.
You know, everyone else will surely have a laugh and, you know, publish more articles that we'll all have a great time reading.
But no, McCormick will not find that to be very funny.
It will be, it will also be a lot more fun because if we're going back and arguing bots again in November, I'll just be laughing and, like, I think the market will be very happy.
whereas if we're arguing and financing and insolvency, like I think they are long shots,
but there is a little bit of teeth to it, if that makes sense.
So let's turn to financing and insolvency.
Both of these do interconnect with each other.
But if you read Musk's motion to stay the trial, it's three paragraphs of, hey, I'm ready
to close.
I plan on closing October 28th.
And then it's 20 paragraphs up, but if the debt's not there, I can walk for a billion
So a lot of people have looked at that and said he's clearly laying the groundwork to try and walk on financing or solvency.
So I want to ask you, describe what the financing insolvency outs are.
And then we can start talking about how he would invoke them, why he'd invoke them, the reasons why or why not Twitter would win on that, all that type of stuff.
Right.
So on the financing front, Musk is setting this up to create a condition that needs to be met.
specifically that the debt needs to be funded prior to closing this transaction.
Now, it's really important to note that that was specifically carved out of the original merger
agreement, and Musk has tried to inject this into this latest filing.
So this is something that is actually new to the case that he is trying to bring in now.
And again, we can get into, you know, exactly why that likely, you know, won't end up working out for him.
The solvency issue is that Musk has essentially repped that the new entity on close will be solvent.
And he could show up and simply say, well, you know, given the amount of debt that this company,
company will hold and, you know, the fact that all of these, you know, stock, the, you know,
shareholder agreements and stock compensation plans will basically be a cash expense, you know,
on closing. There's no way that I can, in good faith, represents that this will be solvents upon
closing, and therefore I'm simply not going to sign the solvency certificate. Again, we can
go and do exactly why that's probably not going to work out for him. But those are the two
outs that he at least thinks he probably has at this point or that are worth taking a swing.
So just to clarify, Elon Musk is part of his deal. He's buying Twitter for about $44 billion.
He got $12.5 billion of that $44 billion price is coming from debt financing, right? Morgan Stanley
is the lead on that debt finance. I remember correctly. And he is saying, I have two outs. Number one,
if Morgan Stanley says, hey, it's a bad stock market out there.
Tech stocks are down 80%.
Interest rates have gone up by 4% since we agreed to this financing in April.
We're going to lose a bunch of money on this.
We are not going to fund this loan.
That's the financing out, right?
That's number one.
And the number two would be, you know, like any bank before someone borrows, you need to sign and say, hey, this money, like it goes to support something.
It's not going to cocaine.
It's not going to all the stuff's there.
Like the entity that is borrowing it, I think, is solvent.
As I know the thing right now, I think they will be able to repay this loan.
And Musk could choose.
He has to sign the solvency opinion or a CFO.
They have to sign and say, hey, as we're borrowing this $12.5 billion right now, I think the bank
will get paid back.
And if he doesn't sign that, that's the insolvency route.
He didn't sign that.
And the bank says, well, we can't give you the loan.
and then he's kind of destroyed his own financing. Am I thinking about these two risks correctly?
Yeah, absolutely. And I think it's worth noting that, you know, Morgan Stanley and the other
debt financiers will absolutely take a bath on this deal. They stand to lose, I think it's somewhere
between $500 million and a billion dollars if this closes. So they certainly would love for this
deal to disappear. Now, there are a lot of reasons why they won't simply walk, but it would be
a godsend to them if the deal were to disappear. Similarly, on the solvency side,
there are, people have raised legitimate concerns about the ongoing solvency of the Twitter business.
Now, it's important to differentiate projections of what Twitter might look like in two years
from the solvency upon closing, which is really what we're talking about here in this merger
agreement. That's great. That's great. Now, I think if a layperson looked at this deal and they
said, hey, Andrew and Lionel are talking a lot about financing. Like this deal when it came out,
it said, you know, the practice says it is not contingent on financing. And we'll talk about
what the merger specifically says about financing, but the debt is committed. It's not contingent on
financing. So how is he going to get out on financing? You mentioned the banks taking a bath,
but I think pros who have done this for a long time would say, that's not a reason to get out.
So I just want to talk about like, what would the process for the banks actually pulling out on this
look like? Well, first, I should say that I am not a leveraged finance expert. So, you know,
the internal machinations of Morgan Stanley are a little above my pay grade. You know,
know, there's a lot of reasons why they won't even attempt to get out of this. And I think we should
just kind of address that first off, that there are huge reputational issues to Morgan Stanley and
others if they were to simply walk. You know, they have essentially the entire business of, you know,
their Lev Finn arm at stake. So even though they stand to take a bath on this, it is highly unlikely
that the long-term, you know, terminal value of this business is worth, you know, the risk that
they will assume by simply walking on this. There's a few different ways that it could actually
happen. And it's important, again, to kind of bifurcate this into two paths. One path is
simply that the banks themselves refuse to fund this, that they show up and they say,
we're not going to provide the financing. The other path is that Musk himself is working to
shoot himself in the foot here and do things in the background that caused the banks to not
fund. That would be more analogous to what we saw in the Deco Pack case.
which I've written about, which Matt Levine has written about, which has been discussed at length.
And so there's really two ways that the banks could ultimately decide to not fund this,
and there are different consequences for each one of those.
Yep. So look, I think your point on the left-in thing is great.
It's a point I've been making to a lot of people. It's like, look, yes, the banks are going
to take a $1 billion bath on this or $500 million or whatever you want to call it.
But there was a Jamie Diamond interview a couple of days ago, which I think summed it up really
nicely, where he said, they're big boys, right? They've built this in that they will lose money
on loans. And if they, if they pulled out, Twitter is the greatest MAE, most public, most visible
MAE buyer's remorse case will ever see. If they pull out just because they were going to take a
little bit of a loss on these, they've absolutely destroyed their left-in financing franchises, right?
And those advise hundreds of mergers per year, generating billions of dollars in fees.
Every seller in the future is going to say, oh, Lionel, Andrew, you're the buyers.
You're coming to me with financing for Morgan Stanley.
Guess what?
Financing is a commodity.
Morgan Stanley's no good.
We remember when they pulled from Twitter because things got a little hairy.
Go find it from someone else.
So they've destroyed their franchises and they have a contract.
They're going to lose in court on the contract as well.
So they've destroyed their franchises and they probably have to fund the loan anyway, not a good
combo for them.
Yeah, it's also worth noting that this is not the first time that Morgan Stanley and these other
Levin guys have taken this type of a bath.
This stuff, you know, I hate to say it happens all the time, but it happens relatively
frequently.
So this is not an unheard of scenario, like you say, they're big boys.
They've built this into their projections and economic.
downturns are part of those projections. So to think that they're simply going to walk in this
scenario would be a bit farcical, a bit of a leap. It comes back to buyer's remorse, right?
Like, if the markets had gotten really hot, Twitter would have had to do this deal and they would
have made it. The debt financiers actually would have made a good bit of money on, hey, we had this
loan built in at 10% and we're selling it to investors at 7%. And if I remember from my left in days,
is like you have to split part of that profit with the borrower,
but you would have made money on the upside just because the downside came to play.
You can't buyer's remorse.
And the only other thing I'll note there, you can correct me if I'm wrong.
But, you know, Levin is not a new thing.
It's been going on for at least 40 years.
To my knowledge, there has not been a single case in Delaware slash New York that has broken solely on financing.
The two exceptions to that would be Hexon Huntsman,
had a little bit of financing there, but financing was not core to that case at all.
And then in the financial crisis, there was Footlock or Genesco, which was under Tennessee
law where the financing fell through. And I believe the financier paid a massive, massive fee
in the end and the lawsuits get out of it. So there's only two cases if you really want to stretch.
Outside of that, none. And I would just say if you base rate and said, hey, in 40 years of left
in, nothing has broken on financing, like that tells you how.
how solid these financing agreements are. I rambled a little bit. I'll pause.
No, that's perfectly fair. Yeah, the Hexion case is not really analogous to what we've got here.
Hexion, and I am forgetting the exact details, but you basically had the financiers blowing up.
I mean, this was existential to their business. The money simply was not there versus what we have here,
which is Morgan Stanley is simply not going to want to finance it,
but they are perfectly capable of financing it.
As one expert told me, that was like, hey, if Twitter's lender was Bear Stearns in 2008,
that's when the $1 billion termination on financing would come in,
where it's like, hey, our lender actually blew up and market conditions are so bad,
we can't find alternative financing.
But it's not, hey, the lender is going to take a little boo-boo on this.
Yeah, that's exactly the right way to think about this. The other thing that I'll note quickly that people may not be familiar with, you know, you mentioned New York law. So those agreements with the banks, as you mentioned, are they are written under New York law. The applicable law in those agreements is New York law. So for anyone listening who is wondering why we're talking about New York law when this is a chancery case, yeah, that's that's the reason why we're discussing.
Let's go back. So there's two ways financing could blow up here, right? Outside of the Barristern's case, we just said. Number one is October 28th comes and the banks come and say, Elon, you have done such a good job. Every hour, every hour on the hour for the past three weeks, you have called up prospective lenders and you have said, this is going to be the greatest deal of all time. I need you guys coming with me. You're going to get paid back so quickly. It's going to be the best risk return you've ever made. But the markets are so.
bad and we're going to lose so much money and Twitter is so bad, we just can't lend this money
to you. So we're going to have to break back out of the finance. Right. That's number one.
Number two is Elon could not meet with any lenders. Every time somebody tries to talk to him,
he could say, hey, I think Twitter sucks. I'm not excited for the deal anymore, but it's too
much of a headache, and I have to turn around Tesla, and I'm trying to achieve peace in
Russia, Ukraine, and launch rockets into outer space and go to Mars, and I just don't have
the time to do this trial anymore, right? That's number two. In case number two, DECO PAC, which
you alluded to, there's a precedent trial where a buyer tried to nuke their own financing.
Anyway, I'm actually getting ahead of myself. I'll let you talk about, you know, in case number
two, nuking your own financing, why you can't do that. And then I want to come back to
case number one. But let's talk DecoPack, nuclear financing, and all that. Yeah, well, we have this
doctrine called the prevention doctrine, which essentially says that you cannot be the architect
of your own insufficiencies. And DecoPack was a great example of this. The private equity firm
that was trying to buy this cake decorating company essentially bought this or agreed
to buy it right before COVID. COVID hits. Of course, the business is no longer worth what it was.
And Colberg goes to the financiers with these really dismal projections and says, you know,
oh, wow, the business is just, we can't support this debt. The business is going to be terrible
now. You guys really, you know, we need to renegotiate this thing. And of course, the financiers
are going, wow, these projections,
look terrible. We want to get out of this. And so this is exactly what the prevention doctrine
is designed to prevent. Musk is not going to be allowed to engineer this out for himself.
The court has two remedies that they can look to in order to solve this. Their first remedy would be
Musk would have to sue the banks to go get that money.
What would likely happen in this scenario is the Twitter transaction would probably close first.
And Musk would then be on the hook for this $13 billion, and he would have to go sue in New York court.
And that would take, God knows how long.
but he would eventually have to come up with this money himself and he would have to litigate to
recover those costs. The second way that the court can deal with this is to simply force Musk
to cover the entire purchase price. They can force him to to pony up everything and forget
about suing the banks.
As for which one is more likely in that scenario, I can't speak to that.
I think the court would probably tell him just go sue the banks and we'll proceed.
But those are the two remedies that the court can look to.
Many of the experts, and I think this is elegant, many of the experts I talk to who said,
look, it makes the most sense.
If you think Musk has unclean hands, he nuked his own financing, DECO PAC, all that,
it makes the most sense to just say, Elon, sorry, you broke the merger agreement.
There's, you know, if you break the merger agreement, you can't get out on, there's lots of
reasons you can't get out for venture doctrine and all this.
You have to close $44 billion.
You can cover it or you can declare personal bankruptcy and Twitter will become an unsecured
creditor to your case.
But you have to close.
You have the assets to close.
Close.
And then you can go sue the banks on your own time for financing, right?
If you're saying they broke.
And a lot of people said, that's a really elegant solution because right now, if the court ordered Elon to go sue the banks, he's almost in this weird scenario where he wants to tank his own suit, right, so that he can continue to argue financing.
Whereas if they just say close and then sue the banks, renegotiate with the banks, anything on your own side, that's actually a really equitable and sophisticated remedy that kind of aligns all the incentives with everyone.
Yeah, I think that's exactly right.
So we talked about that was case number two, right? Over the next three weeks, Elon just sabotages
his own financing. There's case number one where Elon tries like crazy, but the banks don't fund it
for X, Y, and Z reasons. And again, we've talked about why the banks are locked into a contract,
they're big boys and everything, but anything can happen, right? A lot of people have question.
People are saying, if Elon performs perfectly, like an absolute angel, like my baby Penny, who's
best dog in the entire world. He just, he's a good girl for the rest of the way, right? Could he,
and the banks can't fund, would he be able to get off on a financing out or would a court likely
look at his actions over the past five months and say, hey, Elon, you already have unclean
hands. Two or three weeks of trying to get financing doesn't clean your hands after you spent
the whole summer saying Twitter is a fraud. The bots are a fraud. This platform's a disaster.
or SEC, why aren't you investigating Twitter?
Like, your hands are already unclean.
And guess what?
Trying for two weeks doesn't clean your hands.
What would you say on that argument?
I think you're exactly right that this would not absolve him of the sins that he has committed throughout the trial.
I think also, look, if we just look to the contract and sort of ignore Musk as a personality for a moment, you know, the financing is not a condition to
closing under the merger agreement. It's, I believe, section 5.4, and I'm forgetting there's
another section. It is section 5.4. I know it is, because I've got it highlighted, it's the second
to last sentence in 5.4, I can tell you. Yeah, yeah, I should have it just tattooed into my arm at
this point, but I haven't gotten around to that. That would be my first tattoo, but I think it would
be a good one. It would be worthwhile. No, I think, look, the court is not,
going to absolve those sins for one or two weeks of, you know, altruistic actions by
Musk. You know, it's important to know we still have those same remedies available, right? The
court can still order Musk to sue the banks to perform on these contracts. The court can order Musk to
come up with the money himself. And, you know, that doesn't even require us getting into a deep
discussion of Musk's unclean hands. So, you know, again, as far as likelihood of outcomes,
you know, I think the deal closes and we end up worrying about the financing at a later
point, or rather Musk worries about financing at a later point.
Let's briefly talk insolvency. So we've already laid out the insolvency, right?
October 28th comes and Musk says, hey, I can't, Musk or a CFO says, I think Twitter's worth
less than the debt. I can't sign the insolvency opinion in good faith.
I'm, we're seeking a financing out because insolvency, nukes the financing and stuff.
Uh, I, I mean, I think doctrine of unclean hands would come into play, but I do want to talk
about it. Like, I know people, there was a information article the other day, which if you read
it, it's an equity investor into Elon's group that says, hey, I think Twitter's worth $10 billion
right now, which you agree to an equity co-invest in Twitter at 44.
billion dollars four months ago. Not good for you. I wouldn't have wanted to attach my name to that
and try to go explain it to LPs. But, you know, there maybe some people do think Twitter's worth
less than that at this point. Can Elon get out on an insolvency? I don't believe anyone's
ever gotten out on an insolvency out. But what do you think? No, I'm not aware of someone of a buyer
getting out of a deal by showing up and failing to sign a solvency certificate. There are a few points
that we have to address.
One is simply, you know, Section 5.9 says that the parties will make this new entity solvent upon closing.
It's important to note that Musk is not actually a party to Section 5.9, but the parties, which would include the ex-entities, you know, have repped that this will be a solvent entity upon close.
Like you mentioned, I'm not aware of a scenario where a buyer has been able to get out of closing a deal simply because they refuse to sign that solvency certificate.
Can I dive instead?
Because that's one area I haven't explored.
So 5.9 says the parties will.
And that's basically saying X holding saying, look, Twitter will be solvent and closing.
But, you know, if you, there's this thing called piercing the veil where X holdings is the only thing it's got is cash coming in from Elon basically, right?
it's designed. So could you read 5.9 rep and the 5.9 rep and just to skip ahead to the end,
basically say, look, if Elon thinks Twitter is insolvent based on 5.9, either the court or Elon himself
should just agree or the court could pierce the veil and say, Elon, this is simple. Pump in $2 billion more
cash into Twitter to make them solvent and get this deal done. Am I thinking about that correctly?
Yeah, I think that's a very likely outcome. I think it is a good candidate for piercing the veil if we end up going down that route because there is sort of a common corporate identity between Musk and the ex-entities. I will say, as far as financing, you know, you mentioned the one equity partner which was trying to
get out. I believe that was Manhattan Venture Partners the other day. It's worth noting that if
Musk has to come up with money on the equity side, he's probably not having to come up with a
tremendous amount more. I did read that article where Manhattan Venture Partners was saying that
we think Twitter is worth 10 to 12 billion or something like that. But it's important to note that
Manhattan Venture Partners is a firm with, I think, less than a billion of assets under
management. They are not a majority investor in this by any stretch. You know, we look at the other
partners in this deal. And, you know, we've got Larry Ellison who's going to pony up. We've got,
you know, the big VCs that are still committed to this deal. So if we do end up requiring Elon to
pony up more money, it is unlikely that, you know, the bulk of those equity partners' stakes
are at risk. Yep. Just on insolvency. So this is going to get technical, but you know what,
people are listening to a podcast that's not legal advice, but talking about a merger contract,
so it has to get technical. Elon's motion to stay, or his proposed order to say, I'm sorry,
From the top of my head, it basically says, paragraph one, it says, hey, all conditions to close, I don't think it was exactly this, but it was all conditions to close are met, or all the conditions in Article 7 are met.
And if you read Article 7, I believe it was, solvency is not an exception in that article, if I'm saying this correctly.
So my question is basically, look, Elon says Article 7 is good.
Solvency isn't mentioned as an exception.
Article 7 says we're ready to close. There is a solvency condition above.
Has Elon already rep that as of when he made that proposed motion to stay or whatever?
Did he rep that Twitter solvent there?
It's possible. We have, you know, there's a host of issues to discuss in terms of judicial estoppel and other things that essentially make that a binding statement.
Look, it wouldn't necessarily be like a fraudulent statement if in the ensuing weeks,
there was something to cause the new entity to become insolvent. But I think it's important
to note that it's highly unlikely that there are new events coming to light that are not curable
events that would make it an insolvent entity. In other words, I don't think McCormick is going to
think it's very funny. Things that McCormick won't think is funny. McCormick isn't going to think
it's very funny for Musk to show up two weeks later or two and a half weeks later or whatever and
say, oh, actually now I think there's a solvency issue. I didn't think so before. I didn't bother
bringing it up. But things have really changed, even though effectively nothing has changed because
I'm quite sure that the major players are still showing up to this deal. Just to add on, this is the
first time we mentioned name. So McCormick is Chancellor McCormick. I believe I
I can call her a judge, the chancellor who's overseeing the case.
She was also the author of the DecoPack case that we've mentioned a few times.
That's a great precedent here.
And I know ours, when she got assigned to the case, we're instantly like,
DecoPack, this is really good for us.
But you mentioned, and I think that's great.
Judicial estoppel says, hey, you can't file one day that says Twitter is insolvent.
I want to get out of it.
And then the next day, say, Twitter is solvent.
I want to do the deal.
And then the next day, say Twitter is insolvent.
You have to be consistent throughout your files, right?
So both on insolvency and financing, there's two things if Elon tries to get out on
October 28th, he could go for either route.
He could either say, hey, when I made the motion to stay the week of October 4th, I was
serious about staying, but something so bad happened between October 4th and October 28th
that I can no longer sign that this is solvent or, you know, I don't think financing
is available anymore.
Or he can say, hey, I made the motion to stay.
and in the back of my mind, I knew I was going to say Twitter was insolvent, or I knew that financing was going to fall through.
But I just had to file the motion to stay to put off the trial so I could make this new claim, right?
Let's start with the kind of crazier one that I don't think the court will be very happy with.
And let's say he was kind of weaponizing the system.
He filed the motion to stay with the idea that he was going to do this.
I mean, at that point is, can the judge, even if he's right and it's insolvent, if he weaponized the court like this,
could she kind of throw the book at him?
I think so.
You know, again, it's going to come down to what what McCormick can actually sort of prove with the evidence in front of her, right?
You know, Musk could come up with some plausible argument as to why things had in fact changed.
So McCormick is not going to simply throw the book at him.
But that's if that's if he says it would.
an insolvent between October 4th and October 28th, right? If he said, oh, I knew on October 4th,
I thought it was insolvent and I paused for three weeks because I wanted to make this argument,
I think that's a different thing where he kind of weaponized the system, right? Yes, sorry. And that was my
misunderstanding of the question. So if he did in fact hide this argument, hide the ball on this
argument. Yeah, McCormick will absolutely bring hell down upon him for doing that. I think,
you know, even absent the full discussion of judicial estoppel, it's simply something that he didn't
raise and he had the opportunity to and should have raised it had there been a substantial
concern. So in order to move forward with Musk's articulation of events, you know, you essentially
have to believe that this was truly an innocuous and inadvertent slip up. And I just don't think
that given the amount that's on the line, that McCormick would find that to be very plausible and
and a satisfactory outcome here.
Perfect.
Let's, okay, last thing, and then I want to talk about how the trial would go.
So, again, we talked about how Elon Musk and his motion to stay.
He said, hey, I want to stay.
There's three paragraphs of, I'm ready to close.
I'm going to close by October 28th if you give me the opportunity.
And then there's 20 paragraphs of, but if the debt's not there, I can get out for a billion dollars.
And one thing that struck me is, A, obviously,
everyone struck by how many times he's basically hinting to the court that he's going to do this,
right? Even though I think both you and I think it's not a good idea to file this motion to stay
and then try to get out of it unless the facts and circumstances have actually changed.
But the other thing that jumped out to me and a lot of ARBs is he included in a footnote.
He said, if defendants refused to close because the debt has not funded,
Twitter can only pursue a claim for breach against X holdings.
Okay, that's fine. X-holding's the merger sub. The remedy for such a breach is a $1 billion
termination fee. And the thing that jumped out to me is they included a section that said
the merger agreement expressly caps the amount to that termination fee. And this is, quote,
even in the case of a knowing and intentional breach, consistent with that cap, Musk has a $1 billion
limited guarantee to the ex-holdens, right? So the question here is, look, we've been talking about
how if there's a financing out, if there's an insolvency route, it seems like Elon's got
unclean hands. It seems like a judge would ignore that. I think the incentives would say just make
Elon close and go sue the banks that close or whatever, all that. But Elon is saying here,
hey, even if the financing was caused by a knowing and intentional breach, I absolutely nuked
my financing, the merger agreement says I can get off for a billion dollars. Peace, see ya, I'm out of
here, here's your billion dollar check. Why is that right or why is that wrong?
My God, am I never going to get out of talking about this one billion dollar termination fee?
I feel like this has just been the most, it's been the bane of everyone's existence in talking
about this thing, but it's a very valid point. It has, but look, I mean, I've always dismissed it.
You can't just get out. But when he said in a footnote, he called out the billion dollar termination
fee and said, hey, I can get out.
on this, even if I nuked my own financing? I was like, oh, well, there's a fun little interesting
new argument to hear. Yeah, yeah. It's an interesting argument. It's an incorrect argument.
I think the termination fee in the merger agreement, I think it's section 8.3. And I want to say
it's 8.3, what, B2 or something like that. I think that's right. I know it's 8.3,
and you can tell we've been reading this a merger agreement too much when you can just start
quoting sections and subsections. Yeah, I feel like I need to pull up my notes and actually
validate this. And I probably should just because this argument has come up so much. The short
answer to your question is nothing in the merger agreement says that that is an exclusive
remedy for Twitter and that it is a remedy that the company, which is Twitter in the merger
agreement, can essentially elect to invoke. This is not something that Musk by himself can
essentially flip on and to then walk away. So there's multiple reasons why the $1 billion
termination fee is not something that is available to Musk, certainly not available to Musk at
his discretion. And adding that additional language in there, in that footnote, saying that that is
the sole remedy even for an intentional and knowing breach, is simply, you know, Musk trying to
rewrite the contract, which, you know, good luck. McCormick has shown that she is a very keen mind,
a very astute observer of all of this. Nothing has gotten past McCormick.
that is a swing for the fences, if ever I saw one.
And just to clarify, because I do think, I heard from some people when this came out,
one of the things that they started saying was, well, Elon is a party to the contract,
but X is the acquire and X has no assets.
And Elon, you know, in the event of her breach, it's very clear he has a limited liability
to X for a billion dollars.
And people started saying, did Twitter misdraft this contract where this like,
little technicality legal loophole, we'll let Elon just write a billion dollars to X and then say,
hey, that's all you guys could come out for name.
Yeah, so, you know, there's a few issues present here, which is Musk actually is a party to
certain sections of the merger agreement. You know, he is a party to section 6.10, which is a
financing section where it says, you know, the parties, including the equity investor,
which is Musk, will do everything they need to do to make the financing happen.
He is a party to Section 6.3 that says that he will take reasonable best efforts to close.
So this is not something that Musk can essentially shift onto the X entities and say,
I have no obligation here.
We also have the issue of piercing the corporate veil, which if for some reason, you know,
we get into the realm of damages and the assets of the X entities are insufficient,
we would likely see a piercing, a looking through of the entity and saying,
okay, who is really behind this entity and forcing Musk to come up with that himself?
Perfect, perfect. All right, I think we've talked about, again, there's four ways Elon can try to get out.
Sipheus, which, my God, my God, we can try and go argue bots and all that again, which,
A, I've got two podcasts on where people can go listen to those if they want.
And B, it's not going to be a great look for you.
If you say, hey, Judge, pause the trial.
I'm getting ready to close.
I was getting my butt kit.
Actually, I want to go back there.
Not going to be great.
Look, we've covered financing.
We've covered insolvency.
Let's talk about what happens, you know, we've talked about the arguments that will get made.
But let's just talk about the process that's going to happen.
So October 28th comes and Musk argues financing or insolvency, I can't close this contract.
McCormick said somewhat humorously, if you guys don't close October 28, shoot me an email and we'll figure out where we're going.
She wouldn't have heard of it from other places.
But what's the process going?
Because the trial was supposed to happen in October 17.
So we missed the trial date.
We're going to have to go do Musk still needs to get to pose.
We're going to have to fight on some new arguments for financing or insolvency.
There's probably going to have to be new depositions with lawyers, bank.
anchors, experts on valuation, all that sort of stuff. So what do you think the process would
look like if, you know, we come to the end of the month and we haven't had, Elon hasn't taken
full control of Twitter? Yeah, I think you kind of hit the nail on the head and you touch on
most of it there. There are outstanding discovery matters that need attention. So that is, you know,
the musk deposition, that is various discovery motions. Like you mentioned, we could potentially
see new issues related to the financing and depositions around that, we would have, you know,
pretrial motions and likely a series of stipulations and narrowing of this case, you know,
similar to the last hearing where the parties had met and conferred prior to the hearing and
a lot of those issues ended up being resolved prior to the hearing. I suspect you would see
some of that as well. So the trial itself would be narrowed in some capacity compared to,
you know, what we thought the trial might look like three months ago. And, you know, McCormick,
look, she's going to try to push this along as rapidly as possible. I think it's highly likely
that given a potential series of new arguments and issues that we would need, say, three to four
weeks before a trial were to actually begin. But we would still see a five-day trial. I don't think
anything is changing on that front. And ultimately, the process following the trial, I think,
remains the same. And we can get into sort of what we think the timeline there looks like as far as
how long do we actually have to wait until we see resolution of this.
No, that's great. So I've heard, I've come to, you know, as a non-lawyer, I've come to agree with the timeline you laid out where I think it would probably be end of November, early December is when we get the trial. And it's a five-day trial. But I have heard people who said, look, McCormick has clearly said, Twitter is getting harmed by this. There is a huge need for speed. You know, could you see October 28th doesn't happen. And McCormick says, great, Elon, you're sitting for a deposition October 31st. We paused this trial.
week of October 4th. It was supposed to be a trial on October 17th. Trial's back on week of
October 28th. Guess what? We're having a trial on week of November 7th. And it doesn't need to be
a five-day trial because, Elon, you just gave away all your claims to reps and warranties,
bots, everything. We're having a trial on financing or insolvency one or the other. It's
going to be a two-day trial and we're done. I've heard some people suggest that. I think it's unlikely,
but I can see all the arguments, right? It's an edge case. Let me ask,
If we try a financing out, I'm guessing the new trial is going to focus a lot on discovery,
a lot of Twitter, you know, looking at Elon's messages with the banks, interviewing bankers
saying, hey, why couldn't you finance it?
Did Elon's arguments over the summer?
Did that really impact the financing?
Did Elon tank this financing yourself?
If this had been done in July or September when it should have been done, would the financing
haven't been available there?
I actually, I'll ask, was all that correct?
And then I do want to ask if the financing would have been there in July, but it wasn't there when we tried to close in October, is that a good argument for Twitter?
Yeah, a few things to unpack there. So you may have to ask again.
Yeah, I think there are seven questions at you.
Yeah, I think, you know, to your earlier point of is there a chance that there is an expedited trial of this thing, you know, November 1st, like we're in court?
Is there a chance? Yes, absolutely there's a chance. I think in order for that to happen, we have to not have the series of new issues relating to financing. We don't have to depose anyone else. We have a Musk deposition and then we essentially go right into the trial following some pretrial briefing. Is it possible? Sure. But I think at this point, you know, Musk is being advised that these financing options
are his only chance, which would mean that we would see some necessity for additional delay.
So I don't think it's likely that the trial would begin, you know, a week following October 28th.
But it is entirely possible. And I'm sorry, I've already forgotten. You're going to have to
remind me with the following question. That was great. Just let's see the trial, let's see this
breaks on financing. The two things I wanted to ask, I'm guessing all of the, the,
discovery, all the arguments are going to focus on Elon's messages to and from the banks.
And then Twitter is also going to be really focused on the banks, hey, did Elon nuke his own
financing? And B, could the financing have been there if Elon had closed on time, on terms
in July or September versus, you know, push the date out two months to October? So I want to ask,
A, am I right on the first? And then on the latter, if a banker comes out and says, we would have
closed in July, but because the market got so much worse by October, we'd know to close, is that a
argument for Twitter?
It isn't a bad argument for Twitter.
I think we sort of end up in the same spot, though.
You know, this but-for hypothetical, you know, I think it doesn't really matter why the banks
aren't closing today and whether or not that would have been different two months ago,
three months ago, et cetera.
I think we still end up in the same situation of, of, um,
Musk being ordered to close, being told goes to the banks or, you know, come up with the money
yourself. I think it's an argument Twitter might briefly raise, but again, I think what we're
focused on here is simply the outcome that, you know, the banks are under an obligation.
Musk is under an obligation to use his best efforts to close. And I don't think we really need
to get into this hypothetical of what would have happened a couple months ago, because the contract
is fairly clear on on musk's obligations to move towards closing if we go if we are not arguing
financing but we're arguing insolvency i think the arguments become Elon and Twitter both
higher valuation experts Twitter's valuation expert says Twitter is easily solvent and Elon's
valuation expert says Twitter's definitely not solvent right so we'll have some valuation experts
and then i think Twitter is going to focus again a lot on Elon's email
buyer's remorse, his state of mind. How did you come to this saying, hey, nobody's ever gotten
out on that? Is there anything else I'm missing? I'm just talking about in terms of the practical
what we're going to be seeing both companies looking at. Yeah, I think that generally sounds right.
You know, again, I think you're spot on with the solvency issues and Twitter's arguments.
You know, they will be pointing to section 5.9 of the agreement saying, hey, you know, you guys
said that this thing was going to be solvent and that you would make it solvent. So ultimately,
ultimately, you know, while Musk might bring some economics Ph.D. to say, hey, this thing isn't
going to be solvent. You know, Twitter doesn't necessarily have to say, look, it is solvent.
The argument is, well, you know, you also said you would make it solvent. So they have sort of this
backstop argument, even if the entity doesn't appear solvent or there are solvency concerns at close.
I'll just note because I think a lot of people who are listening to this podcast, particularly if they, you know, I feel like,
I've almost got a mini JD now. Not that I've done all that work, but a lot of people might say,
well, tech stocks are down a lot. Twitter's business model, their revenue outlook has gotten a lot
worse. Like, why couldn't they be insolvent? And there's a bunch of reasons, but I think one
good one that, or why couldn't the bank say, hey, we can't finance instead? There's a bunch of
reasons, the contract, everything we've talked about. But one other reason I think Twitter would say is,
look, Elon, when you bought us, you were saying we're a broken company. I need to take you private
it so I can slash your revenue, fire everyone, and completely shift your business model in a way I
couldn't when you're public. And I think Twitter will very easily be able to say, hey, Elon, the New York
Times leaked your business plan. Here's your business plan. It called for you to quadruple our revenue
over the next five years. The fact that the next two quarters aren't going to look great,
it called for you to fire everyone and use our cash flow margins. The fact that right now our cash flow
doesn't look great, none of that matters. You had a plan, you know, very similar to Elon and
March you were saying, let's go to defeat the bots. And then in June, you were saying,
there are bots on Twitter. This is a disaster. Like, I just think all of that, like, it's going to be
very much in Twitter's favor. And the contract here is going to be in favor. The actions here are
going to be in favor. But that's just one little point I wanted to throw out there that I think
gets lost in all this. But they're going to have a lot of like kind of soft smoking gun evidence
on their side, if that makes sense. Absolutely. If those projections that Musk's PhD economics,
expert, you know, puts up on a PowerPoint in front of McCormick, if those projections don't include
a one-third slash to the personnel of Twitter, then he's going to have some explaining to do
because we have seen the sharpen your swords text messages from Calcanus and, you know,
the back and forth with Musk. And so, you know, you're exactly right. And it goes back to my earlier
point, which is, you know, it's solvency at close. And yes, that includes projections about
the future. But, you know, I've seen a lot of people saying, oh, well, if the market continues
down. And, you know, if we're in this situation in March and then the projections change. And
we're not talking about hypothetical projections in, you know, 2023 or beyond. We're talking about,
you know, what do we know, what is the plan as of close, as of today that, you know, essentially
the evidence speaks to. And it speaks to Musk believing that he's going to turn this ship around
and he's going to do it while offloading a bunch of the deadweight on the ship.
Let me turn to two many conspiracy theories. And a public figure, as much fun and as controversial as
Elon, you know, there's always going to be two conspiracy theories. But both of these are
interesting and have implications for the case. Conspiracy theory number one is a little bit easier.
But the October 28th deadline to close, it has struck a lot of people that Elon probably needs a little bit more cash to close this deal.
And he's in a Tesla blackout period because of Tesla's earnings.
Tesla reports earnings October 19th.
The blackout window lifts October 20th or October 21st.
He can sell $5 billion of stock in the next couple days.
And boom, we're at October 28th.
He's got an extra $5 billion in cash and he's ready to close Twitter.
you know, a lot of people have suggested this day, he's weaponizing the contract, all that
sort of stuff, is Occam's razor that Elon plans to close, his lawyers would never let him
make this filing if he didn't plan to close, and he just needed a little bit more time to
sell some Tesla stock and raise a little bit more cash. Well, I think the timing of this all
is pretty conspicuous, right? You know, it is sort of just enough time that Musk has asked for
in order to achieve that.
You know, look, it's always a bit hazardous to try to step inside the mind of Elon Musk.
I'm not an expert on Musk himself.
But I think that is a perfectly plausible explanation for why we're here and why October 28th is the day.
Look, I own Twitter.
I certainly would not want to be a Tesla shareholder here.
If, I do have one more conspiracy theory, but I want to come back to something I said
because, you know, go back to what I said.
Just as a lawyer, you know, scenario one is Elon is planning to close October 28th.
Scenario two is Elon made a filing to the court and he had some gotcha at the back end.
And one thing a lot of people have said to me, and I don't know if this is true or not,
because a lot of lawyers have said, don't trust Elon.
His lawyers are really sharp elbowed here.
But a lot of other people have said, look, if you're a lawyer, you practice in Delaware,
there is no chance that you are going to make this filing that says,
we are ready to close on October 28th.
If you do not absolutely mean that, like, you just cannot do that.
Doesn't mean, I mean, Elon is a person and he can make that filing and say his lawyers,
yes, I'm definitely going to do it.
And October 28th can come around and he can say, nope, screw it.
I don't want to.
But a lot of them were saying, look,
I don't think his lawyers would have been in on some gotcha game that like kind of weaponized
the Delaware court system. Do you think that's too generous or do you think that's correct?
As a former lawyer?
Well, current lawyer, yes. No longer at a law firm. Yeah. Look, I think it depends, first of all,
it depends on which lawyer you're talking. Alex Spiro is his own beast and needs to be discussed
separately from, you know, local counsel or any of the other attorneys on the Musk team.
Spiro, I really, I don't think that would inhibit him from filing this.
As for the other attorneys, I don't think that that is such a massive concern.
they have alluded to, and I think even Spiro may have alluded to this in a hearing, that they have
a somewhat volatile client. And so in order for this to pose a threat to an attorney's license,
in order to say that, you know, they were acting in bad faith, they were sort of enabling the
fraud of their client, you have to show that they were doing this.
knowingly. And when Musk is your client, I don't think you can really know anything about his
intent and his plans. So I think if I was a lawyer, I would be hesitant. But as long as I had a paper
trail from Musk saying, hey, I am working on this, calling up the banks tomorrow, then that's
probably good enough for me because at the end of the day, you know, you have to trust that your
clients are at least being honest with you. And if they have no reason other than Musk is a
volatile character to question Musk's intent, then that's probably not sufficient to withdraw as
counsel. It's a threat I'm not going to pull on here, but you said, hey, as volatile, they probably
got a paper trail from Elon that suggested he wanted to. Now, obviously, attorney-client
privilege says the court won't get to see that paper trail. But if he gave them a paper trail from
his banks or from his advisor or stuff, that's going to come up in discovery. And Elon's going to run
into the old, hey, you made this filing on October 7th or whenever that said your planning's
closed. And then October 28th, you didn't like, Twitter's going to find that stuff in discovery.
What changed in the ensuing three weeks? Last question, because I promised myself we'd get out
under an hour and I'm not sure if we're going to do it. It's just too much fun chatting with you,
too much fun talking about Twitter. But last question. It has struck.
a lot of people that Elon appears very, very scared to get to post here, right? Maybe it's all
coincidence, but his first deposition he puts off because of some very remote COVID exposure fears.
And I think if you go back through Elon's history with COVID, it does not seem like the man
is super scared of COVID. And the fears were like, my parents are very, very scared of COVID.
And I don't even think my parents would have been worried about that. And then I think there
was one more deposition that got pushed off. And then he threw in the,
talent settled right before his deposition and people are not people don't think that timing is
coincidental at all right so it seems like he doesn't want to get to pose here and there is
nobody wants to get to pose but there's also he's willing to give in 44 billion dollars because
he doesn't want to get to pose like those are two different things so my question just to you
is like yeah it's annoying to get to post but it seems like Elon's terrified to get to post what
what could he be so scared of because to me the worst case scenario is your deposition goes awful
and you have to buy Twitter for $44 billion.
Like, what's he so scared of getting deposed?
Yeah, well, I think it's important to note, at least in my mind,
that Ewan is not paying $44 billion to not get deposed.
I think this case is a loser regardless of whether or not he gets deposed.
So I think not being deposed is sort of the cherry on top or, you know,
the consolation prize, I guess, is the better term,
for his getting out of this deal.
As for what Musk might actually be concerned about, that is a very tough question.
I mean, look, there are all sorts of theories of, you know, Tesla fraud and fraud through his other entities.
Would those questions ultimately come out in a deposition?
I don't know.
They hardly seem relevant to his ability to close on.
on this transaction. But that being said, look, Musk is a relitigant in this court. This is not his
first appearance at the Chancery, and it probably won't be his last. So I think he's right to be
concerned that he could state something that is inaccurate on the record under oath. And, you know,
from an evidence perspective, you know, saying something that is untrue under oath,
you know, that can be used in future cases as a, you know, prior inconsistent statement, right?
This is something that he is representing to the court.
There's a little bit of difference between, you know, what do you say in a deposition
versus what do you say when you're on the stand potentially and speaking directly to a judge.
But at the end of the day, it is a statement made under oath.
and and musk knows that he is probably going to be back here so uh why give the court why give
uh future opponents any more ammunition than is necessary just just to wrap wrap that up so my initial
thought was oh he doesn't want to get to pose because he's worried he'd lie and then he'd go to jail
for lying under oath and obviously and i think tell me if i'm wrong but this is a civil case
if he lies on the stand he's not going to go to jail for lying now it's not
not going to look good for him. But the real concern here is if he lies on the stand,
if he goes through with the deposition, lies on the stand, just goes and says the sky is red and
all this type of stuff. And yes, he's going to lose this case, but he was already going to lose this
case. But in future cases, and Elon has been in court in the past. And guess what? He'll be in court
in the future. In future cases, they'll be able to go and say, look, Twitter deposition, you flat out
lied on the stand. You are a untrustworthy witness and nothing you say should be given credit
on the stand, basically. Am I kind of reading that correctly? Yeah. And I'll note that the criminal
implications of perjury in a civil case, I'm actually, I'm not tremendously familiar,
and I'm fortunate to not be familiar with that. That is not something that has ever come up in
my legal career, nor in anyone I know, their legal career. So, you know, I don't. I don't
know exactly the mechanics of how that would work. But I think you're right in that,
you know, look, Musk is very aware of the fact that, you know, he already has multiple litigations
going on in parallel. He knows that there will likely be more. And again, he's smart to be
thinking about that and to be not giving anyone any more ammo than he really needs to be giving
So, again, do I think that is the reason why he's closing the transaction on this time one?
Probably not.
I think, you know, there's, he's going to lose this anyway, but it is certainly a silver lining to an otherwise dismal case.
Fantastic.
Well, Lionel, I think we blew through the hour mark that I was trying to hold us to.
Honestly, when we scheduled this, I was like, we'll be able to wrap this up in 30 to 45 minutes, but it's just too interesting.
But I always give my guest last chance.
Anything that we didn't cover that you think we should.
have covered or anything we kind of gloss over. You think we should have hit harder?
No, I think that covers the meat and potatoes of it. Thank you so much for having me on today.
I really appreciate it. I had a great time. And I'm looking forward to future discussions.
Hey, well, A, I'm looking forward to hopefully 5420 at the end of this month, you and me.
But everyone again, I'm going to include a link to Lionel's substack in the show notes.
Lionel will attest every time I'm looking at perky legal situations and I love to look at perky legal
situations. He gets a text message for him. You're like, hey, take a look at this. I need your
opinion. So people should really go check that out. There's a lot of quirky legal situations out
there, and Lionel is a great job covering him. So, Lionel, looking forward to the next one,
really appreciate all this, and we'll chat soon. Andrew, thank you so much.
A quick disclaimer, nothing on this podcast should be considered an investment advice.
Guests or the hosts may have positions in any of the stocks mentioned during this podcast.
please do your own work and consult a financial advisor. Thanks.