MORGAN Stanley kicked off another large sale of X debt on Monday (Feb 10), seizing on investors’ sudden embrace of the social media platform owned by billionaire Elon Musk due to his close ties to the White House.
The bank is pitching investors on nearly US$3 billion worth of loans, less than a week after it sold US$5.5 billion in X debt amid strong demand, according to sources with knowledge of the matter.
It marks a surprising turnaround in what had initially been seen as ill-fated financing of Musk’s takeover of what was then called Twitter in 2022. Banks led by Morgan Stanley were left holding billions of US dollars of the company’s debt when investors baulked at buying it, concerned about the price he paid and that his changes to content-moderation policies would drive away advertisers.
But his close ties to US President Donald Trump have swiftly changed the market’s view of X’s prospects even as Musk’s aggressive government cost-cutting efforts sow upheaval in Washington. That’s given banks an opportunity to sell off debt tied to the takeover.
In its marketing pitch for the prior sale, Morgan Stanley showed investors details of X’s earnings and revenue that, while heavily adjusted, suggested that the company’s finances had stabilised, due in part to a bump in advertising around the election.
The bank also promoted X’s stake in Musk’s artificial intelligence project, xAI, as something that could benefit investors down the line. On Monday, Musk reportedly shepherded an unsolicited US$97.4 billion bid for xAI’s main rival, OpenAI, suggesting that he has much grander ambitions for that area of his business empire.
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Demand for X’s debt allowed Morgan Stanley to scale up the size of its previous offering and price it closer to par value than initially expected. The current chunk of debt being offered is expected to price even higher – at 98 US cents or more on the US dollar – and pay an interest rate of 9.5 per cent, said the sources, who were not authorised to discuss the transaction publicly.
Proceeds will be used to repay an existing first-lien, secured bridge loan stemming from the buyout, they said. The sale is expected to happen later this week.
Wall Street banks led by Morgan Stanley got stuck with a total of US$13 billion in debt that Musk heaped on X during his surprise bid to take it private. Investors shunned the debt after Musk upended X’s business, laid off staff and sparked a steep revenue decline. Some funds were offering to buy it for as little as 60 US cents on the US dollar shortly after the transaction, among the steepest markdowns in a decade.
In addition to the US$5.5 billion loan sold last week, a US$1 billion portion of the debt was offloaded last month to test investor appetite.
A representative for Morgan Stanley declined to comment. The bank advised Musk on his purchase of Twitter, led the financing arrangements and took on the biggest portion of the debt. Other holders include Bank of America, Barclays, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, BNP Paribas, Mizuho Financial Group and Societe Generale. BLOOMBERG