Just came across something pretty wild about the X acquisition that really puts things in perspective. You know how Elon Musk dropped $44 billion on Twitter back in 2022? Well, turns out the banks that financed that deal are still dealing with the fallout. We're talking about $13 billion in debt that seven major financial institutions - including Morgan Stanley and Bank of America - are stuck holding onto.



Here's where it gets interesting. Normally when banks finance these huge takeovers, they immediately flip the debt to hedge funds and pension funds to get it off their books. But with X struggling financially, these banks can't offload the loans without taking massive losses. So this debt is just sitting there on their balance sheets like a bad investment nobody wants to touch. Wall Street Journal reported this is literally the worst merger-finance situation for banks since the 2008 financial crisis. That's a pretty damning comparison.

The core problem? X was supposed to handle over $1 billion in annual interest expenses, but revenue projections are only hitting around $600 million. That's a massive gap. Even with the hefty interest payments these banks are collecting from X, the platform's business fundamentals are just not there. And it gets worse - X's valuation has tanked over 50% down to $19 billion. Musk even admitted the deal was overvalued in the first place, but the banks went ahead anyway. Probably figured banking the world's richest person was worth the risk.

Meanwhile, the debt restructuring talks stalled, which created real problems for lenders like Barclays. Their M&A department got hit so hard that senior management had to take 40% pay cuts, triggering over 200 resignations. X's debt became their largest hung debt position. It's a cautionary tale about what happens when you finance deals with shaky fundamentals, no matter how famous the buyer is.

Now here's what's keeping Tesla investors up at night. There's speculation Musk might need to sell $1-2 billion in Tesla shares to cover X's financial troubles. That kind of selling pressure could definitely weigh on TSLA. Right now analysts are basically sitting on the fence with a Hold consensus - 10 Buys, 14 Holds, 7 Sells. The stock is down over 10% year-to-date, and the average price target suggests another 4-4% downside from current levels.

It's a reminder that even the richest people sometimes make deals that don't work out, and the banks financing them end up holding the bag. The whole situation shows why financial institutions need to be careful about which deals they back, regardless of who's doing the acquiring.
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