China Daily (Hong Kong)

Lawsuit accuses Tesla’s Elon Musk of trying to ‘burn’ short sellers

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SAN FRANCISCO — A lawsuit filed Thursday accuses Tesla chief Elon Musk of trying to “burn” short-sellers by falsely tweeting that funding had been secured to take the electric car maker private.

The law firm of Labaton Sucharow said in a news release that it filed a suit in U.S. federal court in San Francisco on behalf of short seller Andrew Left and that it is asking for class action status to represent anyone who bought or sold Tesla shares from Aug 7 to Aug 17.

“This appears to be a textbook case of fraud,” law firm partner Michael Canty said in the release.

“We believe Musk attempted to manipulate the price of Tesla securities with false and misleading tweets, in a directed effort to harm short-sellers.”

Musk late last week announced that the company would continue to be publicly traded, weeks after suggesting that he would take the pioneering electric carmaker private.

Musk met Tesla’s board of directors “and let them know that I believe the better path is for Tesla to remain public. The Board indicated that they agree,” he wrote on the company blog.

Musk surprised markets on Aug 7 by announcing on Twitter he wanted to take Tesla private at $420 a share, causing the stock price to jump. Shortselle­rs bet on share prices dropping. After the announceme­nt, the controvers­ial entreprene­ur came under extensive scrutiny over his Twitter statements related to the proposal, especially a claim that Tesla had “secured” funding for the move.

Tesla shares tumbled on reports that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had subpoenaed Musk to talk about the tweet. Normally, such a major announceme­nt -- taking a huge company private -- would be explained in detail beforehand to regulators.

Musk has described the infamous privatizat­ion tweet -- including his assurance that funding for going private was secured -- as an attempt to be transparen­t. The news shocked investors, market analysts and even Tesla board members.

Musk explained on the company blog that his muchscruti­nized statements about financing were based on his conversati­ons with Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund and other investors.

The lawsuit listing the company and its chief as defendants contends that funding to take Tesla private was not in place, and that Musk’s false tweets to the contrary were intended to “burn” short-sellers, whom he has taunted.

 ?? PATRICK T. FALLON / BLOOMBERG ?? An employee speaks with a customer while standing next to a Tesla Model X at the company’s showroom in Newport Beach, California, the United States.
PATRICK T. FALLON / BLOOMBERG An employee speaks with a customer while standing next to a Tesla Model X at the company’s showroom in Newport Beach, California, the United States.

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