Hasbro Stock Price Surges After Elon Musk Makes Comments About Purchasing Company

The stock market has pushed Hasbro's price up after recent comments by Musk.

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Hasbro's stock price has jumped nearly 2% after Elon Musk made an offhand comment on his social media platform about potentially buying the Dungeons & Dragons publisher. Coming out of the US Thanksgiving holiday, Hasbro's stock price jumped by 2% on Friday. The cause appears not to be Black Friday sales, but rather Elon Musk's recent comments about Hasbro and Dungeons & Dragons. Early Thursday morning, Musk responded to a post on the app formerly known as Twitter by social media culture warrior Ian Miles Cheong asking "How much is Hasbro?" Cheong had posted Facebook comments made by D&D designer Jason Tondro, who spoke about his decision to include acknowledgement of outdated views within early versions of Dungeons & Dragons. In his post, Cheong called the phrase "grognard" a slur and also incorrectly referred to Tondro as the "project lead" of Dungeons & Dragons. In another post, Cheong incorrectly stated that Hasbro owned the "license" to Dungeons & Dragons. (Hasbro owns Dungeons & Dragons outright.) Musk's net worth is estimated at over $334 billion.

The stock price responded positively to the possibility of Musk purchasing Hasbro, with the price bouncing well ahead of Wednesday's price of $63.89. Musk is an expert businessman, having previously purchased Twitter for $44 billion after a prolonged lawsuit in which he attempted to back out of the deal. Twitter's valuation currently sits at around $9 billion, a decrease of nearly 80%. Hasbro's current market cap is $9.1 billion, which means Musk would only stand to lose around $7 billion should he tank its value at a similar rate to Twitter's.

Musk's interest in the toymaker stems from his umbrage over comments found in The Making of Original Dungeons & Dragons. In the foreword of the book, Tondro discusses the "moral quandry" in early D&D material, specifically referencing insensitive and derogatory language that was "casually harmful to anyone with a physical or metal disability, or happens to be old, fat, not conventionally attractive, indigenous, Black, or a woman." Tondro never criticizes Gary Gygax or the other co-creators of Dungeons & Dragons by name in the foreword, but Musk and several other right-wing leaning commentators took his words as an explicit attack.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer


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KYRON45

Hero
That's pretty generous. The D&D player base is very young, exactly the demographic that has the least respect for Musk (and the one that his comments seem designed to infuriate). Impressing a sub-set of bitter grognards is not gonna come close to the cost of alienating the youth.

I am an older fan. Don't lump me in with your assumptions about what "older fans" feel. What you mean is that you feel you have justifications for feeling insulted and pushed aside by WotC. Fair enough, but I don't feel either, and it seems like a lot of other older fans are seeing the same problems that you are.
I’m an old timer too. I don’t care about any of the stuff that everyone seems to think everyone else cares about.

I buy books from publishers that make good books. I don’t do background checks and dive into the zeitgeist.
 



UngainlyTitan

Legend
Supporter
It's almost like it's high time for things to drastically change.
YEs, but drastic changes are usually generational or even more sometimes. The immediate fallout of the French Revolution took 25 or so years to resolve (and a continental war) but the causal elements destabilised European politics for most of the next century.
Some might argue that they are still destabilising European politics. :)

The last time the US took a swing at oligarchal privilege, with trust busting, kicked off before WWI if memory serves but it led to a series of events and measures that culminated in the New Deal.
It is impossible to get into more detail about the current situation without getting into the weeds of current politics but to be honest I am not sure I have anything more useful to say since I have not the slightest clue as to how the current situation will resolve itself.
I think a point of drastic change may come but to paraphrase Hemingway ((I believe, on bankruptcy) "things happen slowly at first then all of a sudden."
 

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