Musk has been one of Wall Street's biggest patrons, doling out
nearly $500 million in fees to investment banks such as Goldman
Sachs Group Inc and Morgan Stanley since 2000, mostly for work
on Tesla Inc, according to an estimate by Refinitiv.
This estimate does not include Musk's privately held start-ups
SpaceX, Neuralink and The Boring Company. Bankers said these
companies have paid tens of millions of dollars in investment
banking fee revenue over the years for their capital raisings.
The bankers, who spoke about their business prospects with Musk
on condition of not being identified, said they would pursue
some of these opportunities, including roles in any initial
public offerings these companies may pursue down the line.
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley did not immediately respond to
a request for comment.
GRAPHIC: Banks rake in big bucks from advising Musk https://graphics.reuters.com/TWITTER-MA/znvneabjypl/chart.png
For an interactive graphic, click here: https://tmsnrt.rs/3AMwve2
According to an earlier regulatory filing, Twitter's financial
advisors Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase would receive fees
amounting to a total of $133 million.
According to estimates from Refinitiv, Morgan Stanley and the
other financial advisors stand to make over $55 million from
advising Musk, while the banks providing acquisition financing
would stand to receive anywhere between $150 million to $200
million.
This is not the first time bankers have been let down by Musk in
an acquisition. He also reneged on his plan to take Tesla
private for $72 billion in 2018 after publicly announcing that
he had the "funding secured".
SpaceX was most recently valued at a whopping $125 billion,
making it one of the world's most richly valued private
companies. It is expected to go public at a significantly higher
valuation, according to IPO bankers and lawyers.
SpaceX did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
To be sure, there is no guarantee that banks will lose out on
the fees. This is because Twitter has sued Musk in a Delaware
court to force him to complete the deal.
(Reporting by Anirban Sen in New York; Editing by Stephen
Coates)
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