Breakingviews: Elon Musk buys Tesla a pounding Chinese headache

Tesla Inc's Elon Musk and Grace Tao attend a delivery ceremony for the EV maker's China-made Model 3 cars in Shanghai
Tesla Inc CEO Elon Musk and Grace Tao, Tesla's vice president for external relations, attend a delivery ceremony for the electric vehicle (EV) maker's China-made Model 3 cars in Shanghai, China January 7, 2020. Picture taken January 7, 2020. REUTERS/Aly Song Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab
HONG KONG, April 26 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Elon Musk may not be concerned about making money from Twitter (TWTR.N), opens new tab. But his $44 billion deal read more for the social media network has bought what could be a huge political headache.
Musk, who Breakingviews estimates could earn an unimpressive 1% investment return on the transaction, won’t be the first tycoon to prop up a struggling news operation in the name of the public good. Musk says he is supporting free speech, and there’s no reason to doubt him. But as with Alibaba’s (9988.HK), opens new tab purchase of Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post, there’s lots of hidden risk.
Since the Hong Kong demonstration movement prompted a massive counterattack by Chinese state actors on foreign social media, Twitter (TSLA.O), opens new tab has removed hundreds of thousands of Chinese accounts, opens new tab and slapped labels on state media tweets. It stopped taking advertising from government mouthpieces like Xinhua and declined to cooperate with Chinese government requests. Twitter also gives critics a global platform from which they lambast Beijing. The recently passed National Security Law explicitly targets seditious speech including on overseas websites. Twitter, like most foreign media, has not cooperated.
Twitter’s servers, staff and customers are almost entirely out of President Xi Jinping’s reach. But Tesla produces half of its automobiles in Shanghai, where it enjoys tax breaks, and depends on local suppliers for critical components. The domestic market generates 25% of sales: $4.7 billion in the quarter ending in March, as Party tabloid The Global Times unsubtly pointed out on Twitter after the deal was announced.
It seems likely that Twitter, under its new owner, will relax bans on political speech. Former President Donald Trump may get his account back. Beijing will push Musk to ease up on its propaganda army too, but the pressure is unlikely to stop there. Communist officials do not share Musk’s free speech values and they know how to squeeze. If Beijing has Musk over for tea to talk about “fake news” spread by overseas dissidents, and he doesn’t take the hint, his Chinese operations may suddenly find themselves in regulatory hot water. If he cooperates, on the other hand, the U.S. Congress will call him in next.
Unlike Twitter, which lost money in the last two fiscal years, Tesla is nicely profitable with an adjusted EBITDA margin of 27% last quarter. Free speech is a public good worth defending, but Tesla shareholders may pay a lot of rent for this patch of moral high ground.
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(The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)
CONTEXT NEWS
- Twitter said on April 25 that it had agreed to sell itself to an entity wholly owned by Elon Musk for $54.20 a share in a transaction valued at $44 billion. The price represents a 38% premium to where Twitter shares closed on April 1, the last trading day before Musk disclosed his more than 9% stake in the social media company.

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Editing by Antony Currie and Katrina Hamlin

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Asia Economics Editor Pete Sweeney joined Reuters Breakingviews in Hong Kong in September 2016. Previously he served as Reuters' chief correspondent for China Economy and Markets, running teams in Shanghai and Beijing; before that he was editor of China Economic Review, a monthly magazine focused on providing news and analysis on the mainland economy. Sweeney came to China as a Fulbright scholar in 2008, and in that role conducted research on the Chinese aviation industry and outbound M&A. In prior incarnations he helped resettle refugees in Atlanta, covered the European Union out of Brussels, and took a poorly timed swing at craft-beer entrepreneurship in Quito even as the Ecuadorean currency collapsed (not his fault). He speaks Mandarin Chinese, at the expense of his Spanish.