The tumultuous fallout of Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s proposed Twitter (NYSE: TWTR) takeover that led to a legal battle hasn’t yet settled but the litigious billionaire can’t seem to separate himself from controversies.
Even if no one was asking, Musk tweeted on Tuesday that he plans to buy the British football team Manchester United (NYSE: MANU).
Also, I’m buying Manchester United ur welcome
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 17, 2022
After the tweet spread like wildfire across the twittersphere and investing spaces–since the sports team is publicly trading on the New York Stock Exchange–Musk walked back on his words, claiming that the buyout is a “long-running joke.” He added that he will not be buying any sports team; although if he was, “it would be Man U.”
No, this is a long-running joke on Twitter. I’m not buying any sports teams.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 17, 2022
It could have just been another one of Musk’s contentious tweets that frequently land him in legal skirmishes with government agencies, the Securities and Exchange Commission in particular. The regulatory body has long contended that Musk’s tweets concerning publicly traded companies should be under scrutiny.
But keen eyes have noticed the pattern of unusual activity in Manchester United’s shares, generating “3500% increase in volume” days prior to the Musk joke.
Unusual options activity from Friday:$MANU @ManUtd
— Will Meade (@realwillmeade) August 13, 2022
Over 37,600 $MANU 9/16 $14 calls for 35 cents
Over 358 times open interest
I must admit, this has got to be up there in terms of weird unusual activity.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) August 17, 2022
You can check for yourself how weird these $MANU calls are given $MANU's general options activity.
With Elon's tweet, it just gets even weirder.
You can explore $MANU here: https://t.co/AoPQ8IiHvU pic.twitter.com/t0LcaIizH7
Some went for the stretch and connected the dots, theorizing that the buyout joke was mentioned so it would send the football team’s shares spiking (as a pattern from past Musk’s tweets) and then would definitely generate gains for the late call options placed days prior.
Others see this latest brouhaha as Musk skirting yet again the securities and regulatory agencies, making the fake-out another piece of evidence to rein in Musk openly tweeting about public stocks which could lead to potential real investment losses or gains.
wtf
— Buck "Dark Deer" 14k (@eriz35) August 17, 2022
if this is not serious (eg if there is not a contract right now) he needs to be given a D&O ban https://t.co/tUDcZb1V1V
Fun fact. Manchester United is traded on the NYSE. So…. he did another securities fraud. $MANUhttps://t.co/4qrI5URobJ https://t.co/YPZATSray6
— Tesla Tunnel (@TeslaTunnel) August 17, 2022
Elon could have (at least) picked a sports club that is NOT publicly traded – there are thousands of them around the World.
— TalesFromTheFuture (@talesftf) August 17, 2022
But no, he picks a sports club that is PUBLICLY TRADED in the U.S.: $MANU. He knew that.
He is openly mocking the SEC and corp governance rules – again. https://t.co/d5gD7IJrDe
Honestly at this point he should be barred from public markets forever – as an executive, as a shareholder, as anything. $MANU has already traded its daily avg. volume anyways by 5am & was up +10% at one point. Musk is just straight up tea-bagging securities laws at this point. https://t.co/qPy3buCsUr
— Quoth the Raven (@QTRResearch) August 17, 2022
Of course, as always, Musk seems to have moved from the online commotion he caused.
I will seek out one of these “Mars Bars” tomorrow!
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 17, 2022
Manchester United last traded at US$12.78 on the NYSE, and is up 5% pre-market.
Information for this briefing was found via Twitter and the companies mentioned. The author has no securities or affiliations related to this organization. Not a recommendation to buy or sell. Always do additional research and consult a professional before purchasing a security. The author holds no licenses.