Elon Musk must face class action over late disclosure of Twitter stake, judge rules


FILE PHOTO: Twitter logo and a photo of Elon Musk are displayed through magnifier in this illustration taken October 27, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo/File Photo

NEW YORK, March ⁠31 (Reuters) - A federal judge on Tuesday said former Twitter investors who accused Elon ⁠Musk of defrauding them by waiting too long to disclose his initialinvestment ‌in the social media company may pursue their case as a class action.

The decision by U.S. District Judge Andrew Carter in Manhattan exposes the world's richest person to potentially greater damages than if investors were forced ​to sue individually.

Lawyers for Musk did not immediately respond ⁠to requests for comment.Musk bought Twitter ⁠for $44 billion in October 2022 and renamed it X.

Investors led by theOklahoma FirefightersPension and Retirement ⁠System ‌said Musk ignored a March 24, 2022 deadline set by U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rules to reveal he owned 5% of Twitter shares, and waited ⁠11 more days before disclosing a 9.2% stake.

The investors said ​Musk saved more than $200 ‌million, and cheated them because they sold Twitter shares at depressed prices during ⁠the 11-day period.

Investors ​said they relied on two March 26, 2022, tweets, where Musk said he was "giving serious thought” to creating a Twitter rival, and said "Haha that would be sickkk” after someone suggested he buy ⁠Twitter and change its bird logo to a doge ​image.

In opposing class certification, Musk said investors could not prove they relied on his alleged fraud.

But the judge said Musk did not overcome the presumption that his alleged misrepresentations affected ⁠Twitter's share price, and that the investors relied on his silence.

Carter also said the inability to measure damages classwide did not mean a class could not be certified.

The case is separate from a lawsuit in San Francisco federal court, where a jury found Musk ​liable on March 20 for trying to drive the takeover ⁠price down by questioning whether Twitter was overrun by fake and spam accounts, or bots.

Damages have ​yet to be determined. Musk is expected to appeal.

The ‌SEC also sued Musk over his disclosure ​of his 5% Twitter stake. Both sides disclosed on March 17 that settlement talks were ongoing.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Chris Reese)

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