The platform formerly known as Twitter has had a tough couple years.
The difficulties began in 2022, when Elon Musk purchased it for $44 billion.
The world's richest man bought the social media platform last week,
nearly a million Twitter users leave as Elon Musk takes over.
Advertisers continue to flee the platform,
many of them citing Musk's controversial Musk said Twitter was quickly losing money and filing for bankruptcy is not out of the question.
Elon Musk is scrambling quite simply to prevent the social media platform from collapsing.
To buy Twitter, which Musk renamed X, he and a small group of investors spent some $30 billion of their own money.
But Musk also had to borrow $13 billion more from big banks like Morgan Stanley and Bank of America.
And as the platform started to struggle, those banks felt the pain.
Here's our colleague Alexander Sayidi, who covers banking.
While another one of Musk's big name companies, Tesla, has been in a slump recently, X has seen a huge turnaround.
Last month, the company reached its highest valuation since Musk took over.
And he said that X is now worth more than the $44 billion he paid for it.
It's as much of the company's performance as it is, one, the world's richest man owns this company,
and two, he's now very close with the most powerful man in the United States, the president.
Welcome to the Journal, our show about money, business, and power.
I'm Jessica Mendoza.
It's Wednesday, April 16th.
Coming up on the show, how Elon Musk pulled off a comeback for X.