Sriram Krishnan is the 5/2 favourite with Canadian Sportsbooks to be the next Twitter CEO with Elon Musk set to step down after his recent Twitter poll.
Elon Musk polled his followers and other Twitter users around whether or not he should step down from the role with 57.5% of voters saying "yes" in the poll.
Krishnan was a previous employee at Twitter and made a return when Musk completed his takeover to help out the Tesla CEO with his running of the social media site.
Next Twitter CEO | Odds | Probability |
---|---|---|
Sriram Krishnan | +250 | 28.6% |
David Sacks | +300 | 25% |
Sarah Friar | +400 | 20% |
Lex Fridman | +500 | 16.7% |
David Sacks is a member of Musk's inner circle and someone who Musk trusts when it comes to business which may give him a chance of taking over as CEO.
Sacks' odds have come in from +500 to just +300 now to be the next Twitter CEO with his probability of doing so now at 25%.
Odds are also given on who will be the next person to buy Twitter, with oddsmakers thinking that Musk could sell shortly.
Michael Bloomberg is the +300 favourite to be the next person to buy the social media platform, with various American businessmen appearing in the market.
According to Forbes, Bloomberg is the 12th wealthiest person in the world, and the latest betting odds give him a 25% chance of taking over Twitter next.
Who will buy Twitter next? | Odds | Probability |
---|---|---|
Michael Bloomberg | +300 | 25% |
Mark Zuckerberg | +400 | 20% |
Mark Cuban | +400 | 20% |
Rupert Murdoch | +500 | 16.7% |
2023's betting specials around business see odds of 4/1 that Elon Musk will sell Twitter at some point this year.
Musk acquired the social media company in October 2022 for $44 billion after initially backing out from his April offer.
The takeover looks to have been a big headache for Musk since Star Sports in the UK are already giving odds of +400 for him to sell it at some point this year.
This gives a 20% chance of that happening with Musk potentially wanting to cut his losses and consistent backlash of his handling of Twitter.
This story originally appeared on OLBG.com UK
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