X is now worth âŹ41.8 billion â the same amount he paid back in October 2022. Itâs taken over 1,030 days of sweeping changes, public backlash, internal meltdowns and investor stand-offs to arrive here. But has Musk actually turned the ship aroundâor merely circled back to square one?
Twitterâs New Logo, Featuring The Silhouette Of Business Magnate Elon Musk. Credit: Shutterstock | The Daily Galaxy âGreat Discoveries Channel© Daily Galaxy NZ
After nearly three years of turbulence, Elon Muskâs bold acquisition of the platform formerly known as Twitter has finally reached a symbolic turning point: X is now worth âŹ41.8 billion â the same amount he paid back in October 2022. Itâs taken over 1,030 days of sweeping changes, public backlash, internal meltdowns and investor stand-offs to arrive here. But has Musk actually turned the ship aroundâor merely circled back to square one?
From Twitter to X: The Stormy Journey to Breakeven
When Musk bought Twitter for âŹ41.8 billion, few predicted the scale of disruption he would unleash. He immediately fired nearly 80% of the staff, dismantled longstanding moderation policies, and began reshaping the company under his vision of âabsolute free speech.â Advertisers vanished, trust declined, and by mid-2023, many considered the platform a cautionary tale of hubris.
Then came the rebrand: Twitter became X, part of Muskâs ambition to build something far larger than a social network. But the shift did little to halt criticism. Accusations of fostering hate speech and misinformation surged, while ex-employees painted a picture of a toxic, chaotic workplace.
Lawsuits, Layoffs, and Long-Term Bets
As advertisers fled and scrutiny intensified, Musk fought back â not by softening his approach, but by going on the offensive. He sued major ad groups, accused them of collusion, and launched xAI, a new company meant to supercharge the platformâs AI capabilities.
Behind the scenes, Musk was attempting to execute a broader pivot: transforming X into an all-in-one digital platform combining social, financial, and communication services. The inspiration was clear â he aimed to replicate the WeChat model, but in the West. And while skepticism remained high, investors like Fidelity and Sequoia Capital continued to back him.
The Valuation Returns â but Is It a Turnaround?
In March 2025, X finally returned to its original valuation of âŹ41.8 billion. That was a sharp recovery from September 2024, when the platform was reportedly worth less than $10 billion. The rebound marked a milestone â but not a profit. Musk has yet to clear the platformâs massive debt load, and key revenue streams â especially advertising â remain fragile.
User engagement has become increasingly polarized, with critics highlighting moderation gaps and algorithmic bias. Others question whether this valuation reflects real growth or just investor confidence in Muskâs broader tech ecosystem, including Tesla, SpaceX, and xAI.
Building a Super-App or Staging a Slow Collapse?
Musk continues to pitch X as a digital utility hub â a place to bank, chat, shop, and consume content. Heâs teased integrated payments, creator monetization tools, and AI-powered services. But scaling that vision requires mass adoption, regulatory clearance, and public trust â none of which are guaranteed.
Right now, the platformâs return to parity is as much about symbolism as economics. After nearly three years, Musk has proven he can hold the line. But turning X into the future of the internet is a leap he still hasnât landed.
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