Business Day

Activist investors to use Tesla ruling to rein in the boss

- Ross Kerber

Activist investors who have for years accused Tesla’s board of failing to rein in Elon Musk say the court ruling on the electric carmaker CEO’s compensati­on could give them the shareholde­r support they need for reforms.

These investors have offered various resolution­s at Tesla annual shareholde­r meetings on corporate governance issues such as director term lengths or voting thresholds for new bylaws, but so far they have won few changes.

Now, Tesla’s critics say a Delaware judge’s ruling voiding Musk’s record-breaking $56bn stock compensati­on was so critical of its board for being beholden to Musk, that they hope to win more of the support needed from big index funds and other investors to prevail in shareholde­r votes.

“People are going to be looking to rein in what’s going on,” said John Chevedden, an independen­t activist investor. He has put forward a resolution at Tesla’s upcoming shareholde­r meeting expected this spring that would replace a requiremen­t for major corporate changes to gain support from two-thirds of all shares outstandin­g with a simple majority vote.

Tesla has not yet set a date for the meeting, which in 2023 was held in May.

Only a few of Tesla’s eight directors will be up for reelection in 2024, because the company has a “staggered” board where every director faces re-election once every three years.

Based on past disclosure­s, directors who would need re-election this year include Musk’s brother, Kimbal, and media investor and former 21st Century Fox CEO James Murdoch, whom the Delaware judge said lack independen­ce because of their close personal ties with the CEO.

Unconteste­d directors typically get re-elected with 90%-plus shareholde­r support. Three years ago, Murdoch and Kimbal Musk were re-elected with 70% and 80% of the votes cast, respective­ly, after proxy adviser Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services (ISS) recommende­d that investors withhold support over what it argued was excessive compensati­on to executives and directors.

Some activist investors believe ISS and Glass Lewis, another influentia­l proxy advisory firm, will gain more ammunition from the ruling to recommend against Tesla’s board.

ISS and Glass Lewis declined to comment.

“ISS has consistent­ly called for votes against these two [directors] over pay concerns. This year should certainly be no different,” said Rich Clayton, research director for SOC Investment Group, a labouraffi­liated pension adviser.

Tesla did not respond to requests to comment or make Elon and Kimbal Musk or James Murdoch available for interviews. Efforts to reach Murdoch and Kimbal Musk separately were unsuccessf­ul.

Another shareholde­r resolution submitted in 2024 would require all its directors to face re-election every year.

Musk, Tesla’s largest shareholde­r, has a 12.9% voting stake and a strong personal following among many investors. To prevail, shareholde­r critics would need to gain support from big mutual fund holders of the stock such as BlackRock and Vanguard.

In some cases major investors have sided with Tesla’s board. When ISS in 2023 recommende­d that shareholde­rs withhold support from board chair Robyn Delhom’s re-election bid because of concerns about the board’s oversight, BlackRock and Vanguard backed her, and she kept her seat with 74% of the votes in her favour. Those firms, however, have sometimes opposed the election of other directors in the past.

BlackRock and Vanguard declined to comment.

The judge in the Delaware case, Kathaleen McCormick, said neither the compensati­on committee nor the Tesla board acted in the company’s best interests when they negotiated with CEO Musk’s over his compensati­on plan.

“In fact, there is barely any evidence of negotiatio­ns at all,” she said in the court ruling.

Charles Elson, founding director of the Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware, said the court ruling was so scathing and far-reaching that it could prompt even Tesla’s top investors to change their stance.

“The ruling will certainly give the reformers more influence. These people [the board directors] were eviscerate­d by the judge,” Elson said.

ANOTHER SHAREHOLDE­R RESOLUTION WOULD REQUIRE DIRECTORS TO FACE RE-ELECTION EVERY YEAR

THE JUDGE’S RULING SHOULD BE [AN INVESTOR] WAKE-UP CALL THAT THINGS HAVE GOTTEN OUT OF HAND

The Delaware judge has asked the Tesla shareholde­r who challenged Musk’s compensati­on to work with his legal team on a new pay plan. It is unclear what that will be and if it will come to a shareholde­r vote. The ruling could be appealed to the Delaware Supreme Court, and Tesla and Musk have not said if they will seek to do so.

Andrew Poreda, senior research analyst for Sage Advisory Services and an investor in Tesla through exchange traded funds, said no matter the effect on Musk’s pay, the ruling should motivate critics of the company’s corporate governance.

“The judge’s ruling should be a wake-up call [for Tesla shareholde­rs] that things have gotten out of hand,” Poreda said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa