this post was submitted on 31 Aug 2023
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Since I don't follow Musk, please elaborate. I hope, you don't mean his buying an unprofitable company for $40B was to avoid taxes...
Overpaying and then destroying the value means that eventually, he will be able to claim losses on his taxes. This will allow him to reduce his tax liability for his profitable businesses.
Sure but it doesn't make sense to destroy more capital than you're liable in taxes.
No. I'm referring to the $13bn out of the $44bn purchase price that Twitter paid itself. As Twitter is now deep in debt, it won't be making a profit any time soon, so there will be no tax paid on that $13bn purchase.
The $44bn purchase is broken down more or less as:
The process is known as a leveraged buyout, and it's what's killed many staple businesses that were otherwise perfectly viable, eg Toys R Us.
Dear Elon,
You say you hate socialism yet you socialized around 40% of the acquisition money.
Curious.