- The acquisition was thrown out by a Delaware court who determined that the board of Tesla was too close to Musk and had not acted to defend the interests of shareholders. This led to the vote at Tesla’s annual meeting on Thursday.
- “I would want to begin by expressing my love for all of you,” exuberant Musk said as he took the stage after the vote.
- “We have the most amazing group of shareholders. Really, it’s rather amazing.
- When Tesla’s stock price peaked in late 2021, Musk’s compensation package was worth around $56 billion. However, since then, the value of the arrangement has decreased by almost 25% in concert with the company’s stock price collapse.
- The decision by shareholders may help Tesla’s appeal against the Delaware court that rejected the transaction, but it does not guarantee that Musk will get the compensation package.
- Delaware judge Kathaleen McCormick called the compensation package “unfathomable” in her ruling from January.
- “Captured by the hype of ‘all upside,’ or maybe blinded by Musk’s megastar allure, the board never questioned the $55.8 billion question: Was the plan really required for Tesla to keep Musk and meet its objectives?” According to McCormick’s determination.
- Musk, who started Tesla in 2003, is not paid for his leadership of the company.
- As per the conditions of his 2018 compensation agreement, Musk consented to receive shares equivalent to around 1% of Tesla’s equity every time the firm fulfilled one of its operational and financial targets.
- Under Musk’s direction, Tesla’s business has grown significantly, reaching a point when its market worth was $1.24 trillion; nevertheless, sales have slowed significantly due to increased competition from Chinese EV manufacturers.
- Along with stirring up controversy, Musk has fought stereotypes about his role in six companies—including the rocket business SpaceX and the social networking platform X—and expressed strong opinions about politics.
- Following Musk’s social media statement that investors supported the acquisition, Tesla shares gained 2.9 percent earlier on Thursday before rising 0.7 percent in after-hours trade.
- Musk has raised misgivings about his future at Tesla before Thursday’s vote.
- If Musk could not own a 25 percent share in Tesla, he would rather develop robots and AI technologies outside of the firm, he said in a post on his social media site X in January.
- Musk already owns more than 20% of Tesla, making him the company’s biggest stakeholder.
- On Thursday, proposals were also adopted by Tesla shareholders to re-appoint media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s son James Murdoch, and brother Kimbal Musk to the board of directors and to change the company’s incorporation from Delaware to Texas.
- The biggest sovereign wealth fund in the world, Norges Bank Investment Management, was among the major institutional investors that had rejected the purchase, but Tesla did not disclose the vote totals.
Source:
news24