If Elon Musk Goes Hostile, Twitter Is Missing A Key But Controversial Defense
By Adam
SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
EAsy lies the crowns worn by Meta, Alphabet, Snap and Berkshire Hathaway as well as Ralph Lauren and The New York Times Co.
Twitter has a lower percentage.
Why’s it better for the company chieftans at Meta and the others? Their firms have dual-share classes, two types of stocks designed to keep control firmly in insiders’ hands. This is usually done by a founder who wants to hold on to power and set up dual shares when the startup goes for public markets. The structure also works to ward off corporate raiders or other aggrieved investors.
“It’s done by founders who really care about control and think they know best about what’s in the best interest of the company,” says Andrew Metrick, a Yale professor who has studied and written about dual shares and corporate governace.
Meta is probably the best example of dual-share systems. You or I have the option to buy Class A shares. These were most recently available for purchase at $214 per share. Each Class A share gives us one vote. Meta also has Class B shares, which we can’t purchase. Every Class B share is eligible for 10 votes. Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO and founder of Facebook controls more than 90% of Class B stock via personal sharesholdings or agreements with Class B owners. Put another way: Zuck may only own about 14.5% of the common Class A shares, yet he calls all the shots without worrying about anybody else—courtesy of those Class B shares.
TThis protection is not available to witter, which may soon want it as it struggles against activist pressures from Elon Musk. Tesla CEO, a billionaire, has bought 9.2% in Twitter. He also declined an offer to be on its board. It suggests that Musk may have chosen a hostile strategy for forcing changes at Tesla.
Even though Twitter went public in 2013 around the same time as Meta (2012) and Snap (2017), it didn’t install a dual-share class ahead of its IPO. Likely, that’s a legacy of Twitter’s tumultuous beginning. By the time it was moving toward Wall Street in 2013, it had already gone through two CEOs—founders Jack Dorsey and Ev Williams—and had passed the baton to an outsider, Dick Costolo, who’d joined from Google a couple years earlier.
Costolo was CEO of Twitter and had a 1.6% stake before the IPO. But it was smaller than Dorsey’s 4.9% and Williams’ 12%. So neither he nor Twitter’s founding investors, such as venture capital firm Benchmark (6.7%), would’ve been eager to set up a system giving enormous power to two men who had already gotten and given up chances to run the company. (Neither Costolo, Dorsey, Williams nor Benchmark’s Peter Fenton could be reached to comment for this story.)
Further, it’s not clear Dorsey, who returned to be Twitter CEO from 2015 through November 2021, would’ve wanted dual shares. He has been a strong advocate for decentralization in …read more
Source:: Social Media Explorer



