Business News

Hyundai Recalls Recall Recall to Fix for Seat Fires Caused by Bad Ioniq Hybrid Relays

A gray hybrid hatchback races wildly down the residential street.

When people think of it getting hot in their back seats, that’s not what they have in mind. Photo: Hyundai

So, despite what some people would have you think, most automotive recalls aren’t that big of a deal. They are the inevitable result of thousands of people working on a design with many thousands of parts and then asking thousands of other humans and robots to build it. Of course, if a recall is performed and then that recall causes another recall, that’s a different story.

Unfortunately for owners of Hyundai’s 2017 and 2018 Ioniq Hybrid and PHEV, that’s the situation they find themselves in, although it seems the problems at work here are enough to ignite Hyundai’s ass (you’ll understand , why this is funny in a minute). The recall specifically stems from a faulty relay in the car’s power relay assembly, which was originally recalled because it had bad connections that could cause increased resistance and therefore a lot of heat. A bunch of heat could cause things to catch fire, and car fires are bad, especially hybrids and electric vehicles.

The solution to this first recall, which occurred in 2018, was simple and was to replace just the main relay if no damage was found, or replace the entire power relay assembly if something was overcooked. That didn’t work, however, because now 10,575 owners of affected vehicles are being called back to their cars with the same issue over fears their back seat could catch fire (there’s the joke payout!).

The resolution for this recall is the same as the resolution for the last one and, like all recall work, it will be performed by your dealer at no cost. Owners of affected vehicles can expect to receive a notification in the mail on or around August 26th. In the meantime, if you have any questions, you can contact Hyundai’s Customer Service Department at 1-855-371-9460 and reference number 232.

Hyundai Recalls Recall Recall to Fix for Seat Fires Caused by Bad Ioniq Hybrid Relays Read More »

A Canada international with Toronto FC

Canadian midfielder Mark-Anthony Kaye was acquired from Toronto FC by the Colorado Rapids on Friday at a hefty price.

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• Also read: Pozuelo, “a high-profile player” in Miami

In exchange for the 27-year-old athlete, the Reds released young midfielder Ralph Priso, an international player berth for 2023, a first-round pick in that year’s SuperDraft, and an allotment total upwards to $1.03 million.

Both clubs also keep a percentage of the resale amount of the two players.

Kaye, originally from Toronto, wore the Ontario team’s jersey in the junior ranks from 2013-14 before joining Toronto FC II in 2015. However, he made his Major League Soccer (MLS) debut with Los Angeles FC, whose colors he defended from 2018 to 2021.

“We are extremely excited to add Mark to our team,” head coach Bob Bradley said in a statement. Over the past five seasons, Mark has established himself as one of the best midfielders in the league. He is an intelligent player who likes to be on the ball, a good passer, ball returner, competitor and teammate.

With the Rapids this season, Kaye has three goals and one assist in 17 games, including 15 starts.

He also made 36 appearances for Canada and helped the country qualify for the 2022 World Cup earlier this year.

Toronto FC continue their roster overhaul after former MLS MVP Alejandro Pozuelo joined Inter Miami CF. It also hosted Italians Lorenzo Insigne and Domenico Criscito in July.

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You can get free credits to spend on Amazon Prime Day

Image for article titled You Can Get Free Credits to Spend on Amazon Prime Day

Photo: Cari Rubin Photography (Shutterstock)

Amazon really wants you to buy something next week. Less a holiday or sell-off than a collective mass hysteria, this year’s Prime Day takes place on July 12-13, and the mega-retailer doesn’t just create the illusion, it’s slashing prices on thousands of products (the which you probably don’t need), it also offers free money (in the form of credits that can only be spent on Amazon) in exchange for jumping through some digital hoops. If you’re buying stuff anyway and not taking advantage of these promotions, that leaves Amazon’s money on the table, and you should snatch as much of their dirty profit as possible.

Below is every Amazon credit promotion I could find, along with a little bit about how they work and how much credit you can get by using them. Caveat: Amazon is a big company so I may have missed some promotions. If so, leave them in the comments so we can all benefit.

Download the Amazon shopping app and order for $5 for the first time

That probably won’t apply to you – I know it didn’t apply to me – but if somehow you’ve never installed the Amazon Shopping app and ordered something on your phone before, now is the time to do it. The first time you install the app and make a purchase, you’ll get a $5 discount off your next purchase as long as it’s more than $10. Here are the terms and conditions.

Free money count: $5

Complete Amazon Prime Stampcard for $10

Amazon’s “Prime Stampcard” promotion gives people $10 worth of Amazon credit for completing four Amazon-related tasks – it’s like a scavenger hunt, but more annoying. Your mission, should you decide to accept it, gives you until July 13 to:

  • Make a Prime eligible purchase
  • Stream a show on Prime Video
  • Listen to a song on Amazon Music Prime
  • Borrow an e-book on Prime Reading

You’ll need to download the free Kindle app to borrow a book (unless you own a Kindle) and subscribe to Amazon Music Prime to hear the song, but as long as you cancel the music subscription before the free week is up, it’s fine will cost nothing.

Free money count: $15

Take advantage of Prime Day promotions for $42 (give or take)

In addition to short-term bargains, Amazon is offering time-critical free credit campaigns on Prime Day. Right now there’s $42 total available for things like buying a ticket for the Elvis movie or checking out Amazon Affirm on Prime Day, but keep an eye out for promotions to add and subtract as we get closer to Prime Day . However, you might as well benefit from a potential $2 reward just for clicking this link to Amazon’s “Affirm” page.

Free sum of money: $57

Choose unrushed shipping for $1.50 per order

When you checkout after a qualifying purchase shipped through Amazon Prime, you can save $1.50 by clicking the No Hurry option. This credit will either apply to your current purchase or appear as a credit in your account.

Free sum of money: $58.50

Join Amazon’s Buyer Panel for $10 per month

If you don’t mind sharing the details of your non-Amazon purchases with Amazon, you can join the company’s Shopper Panel program and earn $10 every month. Amazon says it’s “by invitation only” and requires scanning and uploading 10 retail receipts per month to the company. So if you want to put in a little work to help Amazon with market research, do it. (I suggest you confuse the system by only submitting receipts for butt plugs and hair extensions.) If you weren’t invited, you can download the app (iOS, Google Play) and wait to be chosen. In the meantime, start buying butt plugs.

Free sum of money: $68.50

Reload an Amazon gift card for $10

Eligible Amazon users can get $10 when they “load” at least $100 onto an Amazon gift card. Amazon doesn’t make it easy (or seemingly possible) to know who’s eligible before you review it, but if you’re logged into Amazon and click this link, you’ll get your verdict. (Sorry, I’m not authorized.)

Amazon often offers credit for purchasing gift cards (which you can send to yourself) and entering certain promotional codes, but the codes appear to only work for a limited time, and it’s not clear which codes are current. Amazon is a mysterious and capricious god.

Free sum of money: $78.50

Discounted Prime membership for students and others

Amazon Prime membership gives you free shipping on many Amazon items and access to Prime Video’s vast selection of movies and TV shows for $14.99 per month or $139 per year (worth it for the beach party selection alone films from the mid-1960s). If you’re an eligible student or receive EBT or other government benefits, Prime will only cost you $7.49 and $6.99, respectively. Be sure to take advantage if you qualify – although we don’t include that in the count.

Total potential free Amazon credits: $78.50

There you have it: If you take advantage of any of the credit promotions here, you could have $78.50 on Amazon Prime Day. But remember: Amazon offers so many types of “free credit” promotions with limited availability windows. With invitation-only status and unclear eligibility requirements, it’s difficult to know exactly how many will apply to you – so my apologies if these offers end between the time this post is published and the time you read it .

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Proud to the Floor | J

Father’s hug, mother’s kiss, brother’s handshake, sister’s hug. The routine that awaits every player when they hear their name from an NHL team has been the same since the beginning of time. Except for Jack Hughes.

• Also read: Rounds 2 through 7: The Canadian chooses a center and a defender in the second round

• Also read: Noah Warren and Tristan Luneau join Nathan Gaucher in Anaheim

The Northeastern University forward, who was ranked 51st overall by the Los Angeles Kings on Friday, had to wait until he was on the court to receive congratulations from his father.

Accompanied by Martin St-Louis, Papa Kent, the Canadiens’ general manager, waited for his son near the stairs leading to the team tables.

“He came to congratulate me. It was really cool,” said the young man who became the Kings’ first take at that auction.

Encouraging him, supporting him, congratulating him and celebrating is the most the Habs GM wanted to do for his son in these two days.

“Despite the temptation, he was clear with me. My father told me he would avoid recruiting me at all costs,” said the center player.

Proud of the place

Avoid pressure

In doing so, Hughes wanted to spare his son additional pressure that wasn’t necessary in an already suffocating market.

“Personally, it wouldn’t have bothered me. It wouldn’t have changed anything for me, said the young man with all the frankness of his 18 years. All that matters to me is playing in the NHL. Whether in Montreal, Los Angeles or elsewhere. »

That didn’t stop members of the Canadians’ management from standing up to congratulate Kent Hughes as he heard the Kings announce their selection.

Proud of the place

Photo agency QMI, Joël Lemay

Various conversations

No, there’s nothing normal about being a CEO’s son. The conversations leading up to the auction differ in content from those that a father and son have at a table.

“Even if he wasn’t a general manager, it wouldn’t have been a normal conversation,” Jack said, recalling his father used to be a players’ agent. He prepared me for the draft by telling me not to expect to be drafted as high as my expectations. »

“He explained to me how it works and how crazy it can be at times. He also advised me to enjoy the moment, sit back and see what would happen. »

Another rather unusual moment is when an opposing team’s head coach shakes your hand in front of your own coach.

St-Louis, a second father

It is worth remembering that Jack Hughes and Ryan St-Louis, one of the CH driver’s sons, grew up together in the American development program. They are also teammates at the Northeastern Huskies in Boston.

“In the last two years, Martin has been like a second father for periods of time,” he explained.

“He didn’t get drafted and despite everything he became the player we know. I got good advice from him. Also, it’s easy to learn about hockey when you’re surrounded by my dad and Martin. »

Proud to the Floor | J Read More »

US Employers Create Solid 372,000 Jobs in Show of Resilience

WASHINGTON (AP) — A strong hiring report for June has allayed fears that the U.S. economy may be on the brink of recession — and highlighted the resilience of the country’s job market.

But figures released by the government on Friday also highlighted the sharp divide between the healthy labor market and the rest of the economy: Inflation has risen to 40-year highs, consumers are increasingly gloomy, home sales and manufacturing are faltering and the economy might actually have shrunk in the last six months.

The contrasting picture suggests an economy at a crossroads. Strong hiring and wage growth could help avert a recession. Or, conversely, painful inflation and steadily higher lending rates, controlled by the US Federal Reserve, could discourage consumer and corporate spending and weaken growth, eventually prompting companies to hire less or even cut jobs.

For now, at least, the latest employment data from the Department of Labor shows many companies are still looking to hire employees. Employers added 372k jobs in June, a surprisingly robust gain and in line with the pace of the previous two months. Economists had expected job growth to slow sharply over the past month amid broader signs of economic weakness.

The unemployment rate stayed at 3.6% for the fourth straight month, hitting a near 50-year low set before the pandemic broke out in early 2020.

“Despite all the doom and gloom that’s been sweeping the markets right now, companies themselves still seem pretty optimistic about their own progress,” said James Knightley, chief economist at bank ING. “It kind of dampens the near-term fear that we’re headed for an imminent recession.”

Still, there are many uncertainties clouding the outlook for the economy. For the first time this year, consumers cut their inflation-adjusted spending in May. Home sales are down 9% year over year. And the Federal Reserve is raising interest rates at the fastest pace in three decades, aiming to cool consumer and business spending and curb inflation, but increasing the risk that it will eventually cause a recession.

“The economic tea leaves are harder to read when the economy is at a turning point,” said Daniel Zhao, senior economist at employment website Glassdoor. “In other words, turning points are only apparent in hindsight.”

Jason Furman, a Harvard economist who was a senior economic adviser to President Barack Obama, said the gap between healthy jobs data and the broader economic picture is the widest in 70 years. In the first half of this year, employers added 2.7 million jobs, although other data suggests the overall economy shrank over the period.

“Everything about the economy over the last 2 1/2 years,” Furman said, “has been, and continues to be, extremely unusual.”

Furman cautioned that economic growth data could be revised in the coming months to show that the economy was actually growing, at least slightly, earlier this year. Or many employers could be catching up on hiring after months of struggling to find workers and could soon be reducing staffing levels as the economy shrinks.

For the time being, numerous sectors of the economy recorded strong employment growth in June. Health care added 78,000, transportation and warehousing 36,000 and professional services – a category that includes accounting, engineering and legal services – gained 74,000. And a sector mostly including restaurants, hotels and entertainment jobs added 67,000.

John Schall, the owner of a Boston-based Tex-Mex restaurant chain called El Jefe’s Taqueria, is enjoying strong sales growth and says he’s bullish on his business. Next week he plans to open his eighth restaurant in Pittsburgh. Schall has hired five managers there and has 30 hourly workers.

Having opened six stores in the chaotic two years since the pandemic broke out, he’s relatively unfazed by inflation and supply chain issues.

“Everything is a problem, but overall I couldn’t be more excited about where we are and where we’re going,” said Schall.

Rising prices have eroded his profits, he said, but he believes inflation will prove temporary, so he’s not planning price increases beyond one he pushed through nine months ago.

However, some companies are announcing layoffs or have suspended hiring. In particular, several large retailers, including Walmart and Amazon, have said they have been hiring too many employees during the pandemic, with Walmart reducing its headcount through attrition. Retailers shed an average of 9,000 jobs per month in the April-June quarter after adding 70,000 jobs per month from January to March. This trend may mean that stores are anticipating slower spending.

Leah Kirpalani, the founder of Shop Good, a clean beauty and wellness company with two locations in San Diego, nervously watches her sales. She has noticed that consumers are increasingly focusing on essentials like moisturizers and cleansers. Most don’t take additional products like serums, she said, and are reluctant to try new products.

She is not planning any downsizing for the time being. But that could change if conditions worsen.

The Fed may take June’s strong job gains as evidence that the rapid pace of hiring is fueling inflation as companies raise wages to attract workers and then raise prices to cover their higher labor costs.

But Friday’s jobs report indicated that such a “wage-price spiral” is not yet taking place, an encouraging sign in the central bank’s inflationary war. The average hourly wage rose 5.1% year-on-year in June, after a peak of 5.6% in March.

When the government reports last month’s inflation next week, the figure is likely to remain high and could even top the 8.6% yoy reading in May. However, many economists believe that falling prices for oil, gasoline and other commodities such as wheat and timber will slow headline inflation in the coming months.

Still, inflation remains a pressing concern for most Americans, frustrating President Joe Biden’s efforts to gain credit for a historically rapid jobs recovery from the pandemic recession. The nation has now regained all private sector jobs lost to the pandemic downturn, just over two years after the outbreak. In contrast, it took almost five years to regain all the jobs lost in the Great Recession of 2008-2009.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell has expressed hope that the economy will continue to expand even as the central bank increases borrowing costs. However, Powell has also acknowledged that foreign factors such as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has led to increased gas and food prices, will make avoiding a downturn difficult.

Last month he conceded that a recession “is not our intended outcome but certainly a possibility.”

___

AP business writer Anne D’Innocenzio contributed to this story from New York.

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US economy added 372,000 jobs in June, defying fears of slowdown

The US economy propelled June with broad-based hiring at levels seen in recent months, keeping the country out of recession even as inflation eats away at wages and interest rates continue to rise.

Employers added 372,000 jobs, the Labor Department reported Friday, and the unemployment rate remained unchanged from May and near a 50-year low at 3.6 percent.

Washington and Wall Street had been eagerly awaiting the new data after a string of weaker economic indicators. June job growth beat economists’ forecasts by around 100k and offers some confirmation that a deeper downturn is not underway – at least not yet.

But the strength of the report, which also showed larger-than-expected wage increases, could give the Federal Reserve more room for hard medicine to curb inflation. Now all eyes will be on whether the Fed’s strategy of raising interest rates will plunge the country into a recession with painful consequences.

Job growth over the past three months has averaged 375k, a solid result, although there was a 539k monthly decline in the first quarter of this year. Employers have continued to hold on to workers in recent months, with initial jobless claims rising only slightly from their low in March.

The private sector has now regained its pre-pandemic employment levels — an achievement announced by the White House on Friday — although levels are still below what would have been expected in the absence of the pandemic. With the exception of the public sector, no broad sector lost jobs in June, seasonally adjusted.

“We’ve essentially worked our way back to where we were before Covid,” said Christian Lundblad, professor of finance at the University of North Carolina’s Kenan-Flagler Business School. “So this doesn’t necessarily look like a dire situation, although on some other dimensions we are struggling with inflation and economic slowdowns.”

Strong demand for labor is also reflected in the 11.3 million jobs employers had open in May, a number that remains near record highs and leaves almost two vacancies for every job seeker. In this equation, any workers laid off when certain sectors come under pressure are more likely to find new jobs quickly.

The Labor Department’s broadest measure of labor underutilization – which includes part-time workers wanting more hours and people who have been deterred from looking for a job – fell to its lowest level since the Household Survey in its current form in 1994, a sign that employers are maximizing their existing workforce as recruitment remains difficult.

Employment in services led gains in June, consistent with a fall in goods spending as consumers shifted to experiences they had to forego while public health restrictions remained in place. Leisure and hospitality businesses, still catching up with pre-pandemic employment levels, added 67,000 jobs.

Public sector employment was an exception to the broader trend, with a drop of 9,000 jobs. It was 664,000 jobs below where it was in February 2020.

The vibrant labor market has been particularly beneficial for historically marginalized groups: The unemployment rate for black Americans fell to 5.8 percent, still nearly double that for white people but at its lowest since November 2019.

Job gains continue their impressive run, easing concerns about an economic slowdown but complicating efforts to fight inflation.

The healthy pace of hiring stands in stark contrast to consumer and business sentiment surveys, which have fallen to alarming lows in recent months. While the widespread perception of being in a recession seems wrong, the rapid job growth seen in the first half of the year is unlikely to continue in the second.

The sky-high prices weigh on consumer spending. Savings are shrinking. The labor force continues to be constrained by demographic aging, low immigration and barriers to work – such as the availability of care for children and elderly family members – that keep many people on the sidelines.

In a worrying signal, the percentage of people in their prime – aged between 25 and 54 – who are either working or looking for work fell to 82.3% in June from 82.6%, well below pre-pandemic levels High of 83.1 percent.

The report included signs that Covid-19 is still an ongoing concern. 2.1 million people said they could not work in June because their employer closed or lost business as a result of the pandemic, compared with 1.8 million the previous month. As inflation remains high, some people may withdraw from the labor market simply because it is too expensive to keep working.

That’s the situation facing Megan Petersen, who supports her family of four in Spokane, Washington, with a full-time job in digital marketing and a side business selling jewelry. Her husband worked for the US Postal Service until last week, when he quit to look after their 2-year-old after gas prices and childcare costs exceeded his net salary.

“Once the benefits and everything comes out of your paycheck, it’s literally less than those two things combined,” Ms. Petersen said. “That doesn’t make any mathematical sense.”

Her husband can go back to work, she said, when her younger daughter starts school. But there’s no guarantee that a plethora of jobs will await him. Consulting firm Oxford Economics forecasts the economy will add an average of just 65,000 jobs per month in 2023.

Business leaders report that while some supply chain issues have eased, new orders are falling. Whenever possible, employers automate tasks instead of hiring.

“Employers are less concerned about filling these vacancies as they watch the economy slow down,” said Bill Adams, Comerica Bank’s chief economist. “I would expect companies to probably start filling vacancies slowly before actually pulling any vacancies.”

Wage growth, while strong, weakened in June and was not enough to keep up with prices, meaning those on the lowest incomes may have to decide which basic needs to support.

As autumn begins, slowdowns are expected first in companies most sensitive to interest rates, such as construction and manufacturing.

Andrew Wernick runs Industrial Plywood, a lumber supplier in Reading, Pa., which last year raised wages significantly to compete for workers as demand for door frames and cabinets soared. Now, with rising mortgage rates driving home sales down, he’s not sure he can hold those new hires through the end of the year.

“Many of our customers are still working off backlogs and new work isn’t coming through the front door,” said Mr. Wernick. “We don’t let people go that easily when they’ve already been trained — they’re so hard to replace.”

Some industries that have been vigorously hiring workers — such as those that benefited from strong demand for goods in earlier stages of the pandemic — are dealing with a return to more typical buying patterns. This can be painful for workers who have responded to higher wages being offered by desperate employers.

Exhibit A is the trucking industry, which brought in thousands of drivers as freight rates rose and headlines announced a labor shortage. Kenny Vieth, the president of traffic data company ACT Research, said reduced spending on goods doesn’t mean enough freight to keep everyone on the road.

“People flocked to the market just as the volume of freight was decreasing,” Mr. Vieth said. “Given the rapid collapse of the spot market, we anticipate the driver capacity reset to be more rapid.”

As the last two years have shown, there can always be unpredictable headwinds – a new variant of the coronavirus, another global conflict or a natural disaster that once again shakes up supply chains.

However, the variable on most forecasters’ minds is what toll the Fed’s interest rate policy will take on economic activity.

“I think it’s inevitable that we’re going to see a slowdown,” said Cailin Birch, the Economist Intelligence Unit’s senior US analyst. “The question is whether it’s a manageable slowdown or whether there will be a collapse.”

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Honda Paintwork Issues: Compensation Approved

The agreement to compensate Honda customers whose vehicles suffered from peeling paint was approved this week by Judge Martin F. Sheehan of the Superior Court of Quebec. The latter considers it “fair, reasonable and in the fundamental interest of the members”.

Recall that the class action lawsuit against Honda Canada approved in 2019 resulted in a proposed settlement between the manufacturer and plaintiff’s attorneys on June 25.

This campaign was launched on behalf of all Canadians who owned a 2006-2013 Honda Civic or 2006-2011 Acura CSX whose paintwork exhibited plaque peeling (delamination) and/or accelerated deterioration while the vehicle was more than eight years old . About 150,000 could be affected, including nearly 30,000 in Quebec.

Honda Paintwork Issues Compensation Approved

Photo: Acura Canada Inc.

Compensation could be as high as $27 million, or a maximum of $2,675 per eligible owner. As mentioned in our previous article, the benefits would be described as follows:

  • Reimbursement of previous paint repair costs up to $2,550;
  • Property repair (e.g. paint repair) up to $2,550;
  • Reduced cash compensation in lieu of in kind up to $1,530;
  • Resale Loss Compensation up to $1,530;
  • additional compensation of $125.

six months

Under the agreement, members of the class action lawsuit have six months, beginning October 1, 2022, to file a claim. Of course, receipts are required. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP Canada (PwC) will act as claims administrator and begin mailing checks around fall 2023.

Incidentally, individuals who have purchased one of these vehicles used and are already experiencing delamination issues are not covered by the agreement as the vehicle is deemed to have been priced down accordingly. A complaint would still be possible if the vehicle was free of defects at the time of purchase and the paintwork problems demonstrably only occurred afterwards.

To learn more, visit civicsxactioncollectivepeinture.ca.

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Elon Musk Tells Twitter He’s Calling Off Deal

Elon Musk is officially trying to end his bid to buy Twitter. After Musk’s legal team made it clear in tweets attacking Twitter over its bot calculations and an ominous story in The Washington Post this week that he no longer wanted the company to attack Twitter over its bot calculations, Musk’s legal team is taking action to end its $44 billion deal to buy Twitter.

“Mr. Musk is terminating the Merger Agreement because Twitter is in material breach of several terms of that Agreement, appears to have made false and misleading statements on which Mr. Musk relied in entering into the Merger Agreement, and is likely to suffer material disruption to the Company ‘ Musk’s attorneys wrote in a letter to Twitter’s Chief Legal Officer Vijaya Gadde.

Musk cites his unsubstantiated claims that Twitter is misleading investors and users about the number of fake accounts on its platform, which the company has long estimated is below 5%. Musk had no apparent concerns about Twitter’s bot count before signing the deal, even mentioning that he plans to tackle the platform’s spam problem as the company’s new owner.

It’s widely believed that Musk wants out because markets plummeted shortly after the terms of the deal were agreed, also blowing up a large chunk of his Tesla billions. Shares of the electric vehicle maker halved between April and late May and have not recovered since. By mid-May, Twitter’s stock price had fallen to less than $40 per share — a significant discount to the $54.20 per share Musk agreed in late April.

Nonetheless, Musk’s argument is essentially that Twitter misrepresented its monetizable daily active user count, thereby violating the terms of the deal:

Twitter is in breach of the merger agreement because the merger agreement contains manifestly inaccurate representations. Specifically, in the Merger Agreement, Twitter stated that no documents that Twitter has filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission since January 1, 2022 contain a “false statement of material fact” (Section 4.6(a)). Twitter has repeatedly made statements regarding the portion of its mDAUs that are false or spam in such filings, including the following statements: “We conducted an internal review of a sample of accounts and estimated the average of false or spam accounts in the first quarter of 2022 accounted for less than 5% of our mDAU in the quarter.” and “Once we determine an account is spam, malicious automation, or forgery, we no longer count it in our mDAU or other related metrics.” Mr. Musk braced himself this depiction in the merger agreement (and Twitter’s numerous public statements about false and spam accounts in its publicly filed SEC filings) when it agreed to enter into the merger agreement. Mr. Musk has the right to request the termination of the merger agreement if these material representations are found to be false.

Musk’s legal team further alleges that Twitter did not give him sufficient access to his data to conduct his own analysis, although it’s not clear how that analysis would differ from Twitter’s own longstanding methods. The letter also states that Twitter told Musk in an unreported phone call that the company included suspended accounts in its monetizable daily active user counts, citing it as proof of its allegations that the company’s counts are incorrect.

… Twitter’s disclosure that it will stop counting fake or spam users in its mDAU if it determines those users are fake appears to be incorrect. Instead, based on what Twitter said during a call with us on June 30, 2022, we understand that Twitter includes accounts that have been suspended — and therefore known to be fake or spam — in its quarterly mDAU count, even if it is is aware of suspended accounts were included in mDAU for this quarter.

Bret Taylor, Twitter’s chairman of the board, responded to Musk’s letter on Friday by restating the company’s intentions to go through with the deal. “Twitter’s board of directors is committed to completing the transaction at the price and terms agreed with Mr. Musk and plans to take legal action to enforce the merger agreement,” Taylor wrote. Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal retweeted Taylor’s tweet.

Agrawal previously denied Musk’s accusation that Twitter undercounted fake accounts and described it the company’s methodology, which generalizes data for the entire platform based on a random sample of accounts. “We do not believe that this specific estimate can be performed externally given the critical need to use both public and private information (which we cannot share),” Agrawal tweeted May. “Externally, it’s not even possible to know which accounts are counted as mDAUs on any given day.”

It’s far from obvious that Musk’s unfounded criticism of Twitter’s bot counts is seen as a valid reason to end the deal, especially given that Twitter is keen to see it through. For better or worse, we’ll be hearing a lot more about this argument in the coming days as Musk and Twitter begin to sort out the messy, months-long ordeal in court.

The story unfolds…

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