Twitter director Egon Durban won’t leave the board after shareholders voted to boot him

Twitter director Egon Durban won’t leave the board after shareholders voted to boot him


Musk would have been appointed to Twitter’s board on Saturday, but the world’s richest man informed the company on the day that he would not, in fact, be taking the board seat.

Andrew Burton | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Twitter director Egon Durban won’t leave the board, even though he offered to resign after shareholders voted to boot him from the position, the company said in a regulatory filing on Friday.

Twitter said its board believes Durban failed to receive shareholder support because of his director role on several other public company boards. Twitter noted Durban serves on the board of six other publicly traded companies, but said he agreed to reduce the number of public company boards he serves on to five by May 25, 2023.

“While the Board does not believe that Mr. Durban’s other public company directorships will become an impediment if such engagements were to continue, Mr. Durban’s commitment to reduce his board service commitment to five public company boards by the Remediation Date appropriately addresses the concerns raised by stockholders with regard to such engagements,” the company said in the filing. “Accordingly, the Board has reached the determination that accepting Mr. Durban’s Tendered Resignation at this time is not in the best interests of the Company.”

“The Board considers Mr. Durban a highly effective member and believes that he brings to the Board an unparalleled operational knowledge of the industry, a unique perspective, and an invaluable skill set and experience with mergers and acquisitions,” the filing added. “The Board noted that Mr. Durban has strengthened its ability to oversee the Company’s long-term value creation strategy and effectively govern its implementation. Further, Mr. Durban is consistently well-prepared, engaged and a meaningful contributor to Board meetings and discussions.”

Durban, the co-CEO and managing director of private equity firm Silver Lake, was on the board when it unanimously approved Twitter’s sale to billionaire Elon Musk last month.

Silver Lake has previously worked on deals with Musk, including by investing $100 million into his solar business, SolarCity, before it was acquired by Musk-run Tesla. Musk said he was working with Silver Lake in 2018 when he claimed to be taking Tesla private, though that never came to fruition.

Separately this week, Twitter shareholders filed a proposed class action lawsuit against Musk and Twitter over the acquisition that has led to volatile stock swings. The lawsuit alleges Musk bought Twitter shares while aware of insider information based on private conversations with board members, including Durban. Twitter and Silver Lake declined to comment on the lawsuit and and Musk did not return requests for comment.

WATCH: A timeline of the Elon Musk-Twitter takeover saga



Source

Nvidia shares up 2% in premarket as U.S. approves sales of its chips to the UAE
Technology

Nvidia shares up 2% in premarket as U.S. approves sales of its chips to the UAE

Microsoft said Monday it has secured export licenses to ship Nvidia chips to the United Arab Emirates in a move that could accelerate the Gulf’s lofty AI ambitions. The tech giant said it is the first company under U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration to secure such licenses from the Commerce Department and that the approval, […]

Read More
Standard Chartered CEO believes nearly all global transactions will move to the blockchain ‘eventually’
Technology

Standard Chartered CEO believes nearly all global transactions will move to the blockchain ‘eventually’

Standard Chartered Plc bank branch in Hong Kong Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images Bill Winters, CEO of Standard Chartered, foresees a future in which nearly all global transactions are conducted on a digital blockchain ledger, he told a crowd in Hong Kong on Monday, as crypto adoption amongst mainstream banking and finance institutions grows.  […]

Read More
CNBC Daily Open: U.S. stocks’ gains in October owe much to AI
Technology

CNBC Daily Open: U.S. stocks’ gains in October owe much to AI

Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, reacts during the 2025 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) CEO Summit in Gyeongju, South Korea, October 31, 2025. Kim Soo-hyeon | Reuters Traders who shorted the S&P 500 — essentially, betting that it would go down — last month were in for a rude surprise. The broad-based index ended the month […]

Read More