Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund — which invested $375 million in Elon Musk’s Twitter buyout — says it hasn’t told the new CEO to tweet less

Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund — which invested $375 million in Elon Musk’s Twitter buyout — says it hasn’t told the new CEO to tweet less

The head of the Qatari sovereign wealth fund — which pumped into Elon Musk's acquisition of Twitter — said it hasn't asked the social media company's new CEO to tweet less. "Have you asked him to tweet less in the last eight months? There was so much volatility. Do you get involved in those calls?" , the CEO of Qatar Investment Authority, or QIA, in an interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos. "Not really, I mean we do not really involved to that extent in term of, again, he has our trust and we are sure that he would manage it very professionally," Al Mahmoud responded. "We engage with the management, with Elon in terms of the plan that he has for the company, and we believe in this, and we trust his leadership in terms of turning around the company," he further said. Since for $44 billion in late October, Musk has instituted at the company, including mass layoffs — which he said was necessary as the company was — and after taking a poll. Musk has also been commenting more about since acquiring the platform, adding to controversies surrounding the company which have spilled over to