Tesla CEO Elon Musk (pictured) was seen going to a dinner party at the Beverly Hills Hotel on Thursday evening, just hours before he put his Twitter acquisition on hold

Tesla CEO Elon Musk and his team are preparing to their own audit of 100 Twitter followers to check how many are bots and spam accounts. 

Earlier, citing a week-old regulatory filing from Twitter, Musk claimed that he wanted to pause the deal to verify that false or spam accounts represented fewer than 5 per cent of the company’s 229 million users during the first quarter.

Musk tweeted Thursday his $44 billion acquisition of Twitter was on hold as he investigates the company’s internal audit. 

On Friday he followed that up saying: ‘To find out, my team will do random sample of 100 followers of Twitter. I invite others to repeat the same process and see what they discover…’

He later joked: ‘The bots are angry at being counted.’ Twitter’s official account, @Twitter, has 61.7 million followers, meaning Musk has a large group to choose from. 

The world’s richest man also said that he was still committed to the acquisition.

If Twitter’s reporting is accurate, that would mean that there are fewer than 11.4 million fake accounts that are targeted for ads. Musk has 92.4 million Twitter followers. 

Tesla CEO Elon Musk (pictured) was seen going to a dinner party at the Beverly Hills Hotel on Thursday evening, just hours before he put his Twitter acquisition on hold

Tesla CEO Elon Musk (pictured) was seen going to a dinner party at the Beverly Hills Hotel on Thursday evening, just hours before he put his Twitter acquisition on hold

Musk was seen attending a private dinner party in Beverly Hills on Thursday just hours before hitting pause on his Twitter deal as former President Donald Trump weighed in on the takeover. 

Musk spotted being escorted by three security guards into the Beverly Hills Hotel for a dinner party. 

Musk appeared to be glued to his phone as he would, within hours of the party, shock Wall Street by announcing his deal to buy Twitter would be put on hold.

Trump, commenting on his Truth Social platform on Friday, suggested that Musk is looking to negotiate a better deal to buy Twitter after agreeing to pay $54.20 per share.

The former US president said the only reason the Tesla CEO had not called off the Twitter deal yet was because of the $1 billion break-up fee. 

‘There is no way Elon Musk is going to buy Twitter at such a ridiculous price, especially since realizing it is a company largely based on BOTS or Spam Accounts,’ Trump wrote as he added jabs at the rival social media company. 

‘If it weren’t for the ridiculous Billion Dollar breakup fee, Elon would have already been long gone,’ he added.  

The world's richest man appeared to be glued to his phone as he entered the building escorted by three security guards

The world’s richest man appeared to be glued to his phone as he entered the building escorted by three security guards

Musk said he was still committed to the $44 billion purchase of the social media company pending an investigation into how many spam accounts are on the site

Musk said he was still committed to the $44 billion purchase of the social media company pending an investigation into how many spam accounts are on the site

Musk wore a dark cap, green shirt and black pants

He had black leather shoes on as he attended the party

Musk wore a dark cap, green shirt and black pants and shoes as he attended the party

Should he bail out on the deal, Musk risks paying a $1 billion break-up fee to Twitter and could also be sued by the social media company for breach of contract

Should he bail out on the deal, Musk risks paying a $1 billion break-up fee to Twitter and could also be sued by the social media company for breach of contract

Former President Donald Trump was among many who speculated that Musk put the buyout on hold in the hopes of negotiating a better deal

Former President Donald Trump was among many who speculated that Musk put the buyout on hold in the hopes of negotiating a better deal

This week, Musk has also sparked fierce debate after saying he would allow Trump back on Twitter if and when he takes the reins, in line with his previous declarations that he planned to err on the side of free speech rather than bans and censorship. 

Trump has repeatedly stated that he has no plan to go back to Twitter after he was removed from the platform following the January 6 Capitol riot. 

Musk’s surprise tweets early Friday sent Twitter stock plunging in the pre-market, as analysts speculated that Musk is trying to negotiate a lower price for the deal or pull out completely.  

Twitter CEO and board member Parag Agrawal has insisted that he still expects the deal to go through as the company prepare for the transfer of power. 

In a lengthy Twitter thread on Friday, Agrawal wrote: ‘While I expect the deal to close, we need to be prepared for all scenarios and always do what’s right for Twitter.’

Agrawal also addressed his move on Thursday to fire two top Twitter execs, saying that he is ‘accountable for leading and operating Twitter, and our job is to build a stronger Twitter every day.’ 

If Musk walks away from the deal, Musk would not only be on the hook for a $1 billion termination fee, he could also be sued by Twitter for breach of contract. 

A senior M&A lawyer familiar with the deal told CNBC that Twitter could also sue Musk if he were to try and abandon the deal simply because he felt he overpaid.

Like Trump, others have speculated that Musk’s surprise move on Thursday came as a result of trying to renegotiate a better deals as Twitter stocks have dropped since the buyout was set at $54.20 per share last month. 

‘This is probably a negotiation tactic on behalf of Elon,’ Toni Sacconaghi, Bernstein senior research analyst, told CNBC on Friday. ‘The market has come down a lot. He’s probably using the guise of true active users as a negotiation ploy.’

Trump, pictured last week, said it was ridiculous for Musk to pay $54.20 per share. Musk has said he would allow Trump back on Twitter once he's CEO

Trump, pictured last week, said it was ridiculous for Musk to pay $54.20 per share. Musk has said he would allow Trump back on Twitter once he’s CEO

Twitter CEO and board member Parag Agrawal has insisted that he still expects Elon Musk's $44 billion acquisition of the company to close

Elon Musk has insisted that he is 'still committed' to his $44billion acquisition of Twitter

Twitter CEO and board member Parag Agrawal (left) has insisted that he still expects Elon Musk’s $44 billion acquisition of the company to close

Shares of the social media company fell as much as 25 percent in premarket trading this morning, continuing a massive downward trend since his takeover bid was accepted by Twitter’s board on April 25. 

It is not clear what the legal effect of his tweet was, and some analysts were baffled that he announced the move on Twitter rather than a regulatory filing. 

Wedbush analyst Dan Ives called Musk’s tweet ‘bizarre’ and said that it ‘now sends this whole deal into a circus show with many questions and no concrete answers.’ 

‘Many will view this as Musk using this Twitter filing/spam accounts as a way to get out of this deal in a vastly changing market,’ Ives wrote in a note.

‘If Musk does decide to still go down the deal path a clear renegotiation is likely on the table,’ he added. 

Twitter's share price has been declining since April 25 in a sign that Wall Street is not confident that the deal will be completed at the announced $44 billion price

Twitter’s share price has been declining since April 25 in a sign that Wall Street is not confident that the deal will be completed at the announced $44 billion price 

Tesla shares have been under pressure amid concern that Musk will have to sell more of his holdings in the company to finance his Twitter takeover

Tesla shares have been under pressure amid concern that Musk will have to sell more of his holdings in the company to finance his Twitter takeover

Meanwhile, Tesla shares, against which Musk has secured $6.25billion in funding for the acquisition, were up about 5 percent early Friday.

Tesla stock has been slumping, and is down 28 percent in the past month, amid investor concern that the Twitter deal will divide Musk’s attention, and that financing issues would force him to dump more of his Tesla holdings. 

The decline in Tesla’s share price has increased concerns about Musk’s ability to finance the Twitter deal. At Thursday’s closing price, Musk would have to put up more than a quarter of his Tesla shares to secure the $6.25 billion margin loan. 

Analysts questioned why Musk would suddenly express concern about Twitter’s estimate that 5 percent of accounts are fake, an estimate that the company has included in regulatory filings for years. 

Susannah Streeter, an analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: ‘This 5% metric has been out for some time. He clearly would have already seen it… So it may well be more part of the strategy to lower the price.

‘It’s going to be highly frustrating for many in the company given that a number of senior executives have already been laid off,’ she said.

Yesterday, it was also revealed the Tesla CEO’s Twitter purchase was being investigated by US regulators after he delayed reporting the buy – and thus failed to provide sufficient warning that a takeover bid was looming.

The 50-year-old’s first move towards buying Twitter was his purchase of a 9.2 percent stake in the tech company in mid February.

But he did not disclose his purchase to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) until at least 10 days later, on April 4.

Any investor who crosses a 5 percent stake must file a form with the SEC within 10 days. It serves as an early sign to stakeholders that a big investor could seek to control the company.

Musk’s April 4 filing also characterized his stake as passive, meaning he did not plan to take over Twitter or influence its management or business.

The next day, however, he was offered a position on Twitter’s board, and a couple of weeks later, the world’s richest man had clinched a $44billion deal to buy the social media giant.

The SEC investigation was first reported on Wednesday by The Wall Street Journal. 

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