The Hamilton Spectator

Tesla erupts in chaos after senior executives leave

- DANA HULL

SAN FRANCISCO — The turmoil at Tesla Inc. reached a fever pitch, as the news that two senior executives are leaving Elon Musk’s electric-car maker emerged just hours after he smoked marijuana during an hours-long interview streamed live online.

Chief accounting officer Dave Morton gave notice Tuesday that he was resigning less than a month into the job, according to a Friday filing. Tesla’s stock plunged, then extended declines after Gabrielle Toledano, the head of human resources who’s been on a leave of absence, told Bloomberg that she won’t rejoin the company.

Morton, a former chief financial officer for computer-drive maker Seagate Technology PLC, joined Tesla one day before Musk tweeted that he was considerin­g buying out some investors at US$420 a share and taking the company private. The CEO abandoned that effort 17 days later, and in the process drew a subpoena from the Securities and Exchange Commission and a series of lawsuits alleging market manipulati­on.

“Since I joined Tesla on Aug. 6, the level of public attention placed on the company, as well as the pace within the company, have exceeded my expectatio­ns,” Morton said in the filing. “This caused me to reconsider my future. I want to be clear that I believe strongly in Tesla, its mission, and its future prospects, and I have no disagreeme­nts with Tesla’s leadership or its financial reporting.”

Tesla shares fell as much as 10 per cent, the steepest intraday drop since June 2016, and were down 4.9 per cent to $267.28 as of 11:10 a.m. in New York. The company’s 5.3 per cent bonds fell as much as 4 cents to 81.75 cents on the dollar, a new low, according to Trace bond price data.

Tesla has long struggled with high turnover among its senior executives, and its finance team in particular has gone through significan­t tumult lately. In the first quarter of this year, the company lost Morton’s predecesso­r, Eric Branderiz, and Susan Repo, who was treasurer and vice-president of finance. CFO Deepak Ahuja retired in 2015, only to return in 2017 after his successor, Jason Wheeler, quit after just 15 months.

By leaving the accounting chief job, Morton walked away from a $10 million new-hire equity grant that would have vested over four years. Friday was also slated to be the last day for Sarah O’Brien, Tesla’s vice-president of communicat­ions.

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