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WASHINGTON: Billionaire Elon Musk has strengthened the equity stake of his offer to buy Twitter with commitments of more than $7bn from a range of investors, including Silicon Valley heavy hitters like Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal.
The Thursday filing also said that Musk is in ongoing talks with other parties, including former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, who is the second-largest individual stakeholder in the company after Musk.
Other investors include Sequoia Capital Fund, which pledged $800m, and VyCapital, which pledged $700m, according to a Thursday filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. But Ellison, who is also a Tesla board member, is making the biggest contribution, pegged at $1bn.
Technology venture capitalist Ben Horowitz said his firm, known as Andreessen Horowitz or a16z, is investing $400m because it believes in Musk’s “brilliance to finally make it what it was meant to be”.
“While Twitter has great promise as a public square, it suffers from a myriad of difficult issues ranging from bots to abuse to censorship,” Horowitz tweeted Thursday. “Being a public company solely reliant on an advertising business model exacerbates all of these.”
Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud has pledged 35 million in Twitter shares in support of Musk, according to the filing.
Musk in earlier regulatory filings revealed that he has sold roughly $8.5bn worth of shares in Tesla to help fund the purchase. Musk later tweeted that he does not plan any further sales of the company’s shares, meaning he would need outside commitments to help fund the $44bn deal.
Because of the new funding listed in the SEC filing on Thursday, Musk will cut the $12.5bn in margin loans against his Tesla shares in half, to $6.25bn. The transaction is also now being funded by $27.25bn in cash and equities, up from $21bn.