https://electrek.co/2024/01/15/elon-musk...g-twitter/
Elon Musk has made a bizarre statement in which he appears to complain about his smaller stake in Tesla and said that he prefers building products elsewhere unless he gets a bigger stake in the company.
The statement is particularly bizarre when you consider the fact that he himself recently sold tens of billions of dollars worth of Tesla stock to buy a grossly overpriced Twitter.
There’s currently some talk, mainly from Musk fans, about Tesla putting together a new CEO compensation package for him.
Musk completed his last CEO compensation plan, which awarded him millions of Tesla shares worth billions of dollars and made him the richest man in the world.
Ironically, the talks about a new CEO compensation package came just as Tesla slashed its own employee stock option plan.
While most commentators don’t seem opposed to Musk having a new reasonable compensation package, the consensus is that since Musk owns 411 million shares in Tesla, representing about 13% of the outstanding shares, that’s plenty of incentives for him to perform as CEO.
Musk claims that he wants more shares in Tesla to have more “influence” on the company’s AI and robotics endeavors:
I am uncomfortable growing Tesla to be a leader in AI & robotics without having ~25% voting control. Enough to be influential, but not so much that I can’t be overturned. Unless that is the case, I would prefer to build products outside of Tesla.
The CEO of Tesla is claiming here that he prefers to build products outside of the company because he doesn’t have a big enough stake in it.
It’s important to note that Musk used to have a much bigger stake in Tesla before his botched acquisition of Twitter.
For those who don’t remember the whole debacle, 2021-2022 were an interesting few years for Musk’s Tesla ownership.
It all started when Musk said he would sell 10% of his stake in Tesla if a Twitter poll would agree, which it unsurprisingly did.
The CEO framed the idea as pressure from the media and politicians about the rich not paying taxes on unrealized gains. He said that he would voluntarily set himself up to have the biggest tax bill in US history.
However, Musk wasn’t as vocal about the fact that he was facing a giant tax bill regardless of his sale of shares, due to a large number of stock options he needed to exercise from his previously mentioned massive CEO compensation plan.
The CEO then used the proceeds from selling his Tesla shares to invest a few billions into Twitter.
He later agreed to buy Twitter and take it private for $44 billion. Musk quickly backed out of the deal despite it being signed. Twitter sued him to force him to go through with the deal, which he ultimately did.
But to pay for the acquisition, he had to sell tens of billions of dollars worth of Tesla stock, which resulted in a significant crash in the stock price.
He even told Tesla shareholders that he would stop selling shares, but then sold more anyway.
Update: Musk added that the only reason he doesn’t have a new compensation plan is due to Tesla waiting for the decision in a court case brought on by shareholders over his prior compensation plan being too excessive, according to the complaint.
Following a separate lawsuit, Musk and Tesla’s board agreed to return over $700 million to the company over excessive board compensation.