The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Elon Musk says in talks with Saudis on taking Tesla private

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WASHINGTON: Tesla chief executive Elon Musk disclosed that he was in talks with Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund and other investors to take the electric automaker private.

The revelation came after Musk claimed in an August 7 Twitter post that financing for a deal to take Tesla private had been ‘secured.’

Musk said in a blog post on Monday he had ‘no question’ that the Saudis would finance such a transactio­n following a July 31 meeting.

“I continue to have discussion­s with the Saudi fund, and I also am having discussion­s with a number of other investors, which is something that I always planned to do since I would like for Tesla to continue to have a broad investor base,” Musk wrote.

“It is appropriat­e to complete those discussion­s before presenting a detailed proposal to an independen­t board committee.”

The transactio­n would be structured with equity so as not to burden Tesla with crushing debt, Musk added.

Musk’s surprise comments last week sparked speculatio­n he would need to borrow massive amounts to take Tesla private, a move that could allow the company to operate without requiremen­ts for financial reports and other pressures of a publicly traded firm.

But the comments also raised questions about whether Musk ran afoul of securities laws by claiming backing without a firm financial commitment.

The disclosure­s about Saudi interest “helps reduce the legal risk fallout for Tesla,” said Efraim Levy, an equity analyst at CFRA Research.

“It also helps clarify the going private situation even if the transactio­n is ultimately not consummate­d.”

But Levy said taking the company private would be a mixed blessing for Tesla and Musk – the company could avoid short-term pressures from Wall Street but also reduce its access to capital markets.

“They’ve had significan­t benefits from having access to capital markets, and the media attention has provided priceless free advertisin­g,” Levy said.

“Despite Musk protestati­ons, we think remaining public has and will benefit Tesla,” he added.

Tesla shares failed to sustain an early surge and ended with a small gain of 0.26 per cent at US$356.41.

In his blog post Monday, Musk said that reports that more than US$70 billion would be needed to take Tesla private “dramatical­ly overstate the actual capital raise needed” because he expected some shareholde­rs to remain invested in the firm.

His comment that he wanted to launch a buyout at US$420 a share “would only be used for Tesla shareholde­rs who do not remain with our company if it is private,” Musk said in the post. — AFP

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