Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Investors sue Tesla’s Musk over go-private tweets

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Two investors filed suit against Tesla CEO Elon Musk and the electric car company after he tweeted he wanted to take the firm private, causing the share price to inflate and short-selling investors to lose millions.

Last Tuesday, Musk said he could finance the buyout of Tesla, founded in 2003, at a large premium to current valuation, at a price of US$420 a share.

As a result, Tesla shares jumped 11 percent, causing so-called short-sellers who have been betting on the stock crashing for years to lose millions.

Short-selling involves borrowing overpriced shares in the belief that their price will decline, so they can be sold and then bought back at a lower price.

Musk, often the center of controvers­y, did not prove he had the funds to finance the operation -- despite tweeting “funding secured.”

Kalman Isaacs, one of the investors who filed suit Friday in a San Francisco court, claimed Musk’s tweets were “designed to completely decimate shortselle­rs.” He said he had to buy around 3,000 Tesla shares on Wednesday, the day after Musk’s tweets, to limit his losses.

William Chamberlai­n, another investor, also filed suit with accusation­s of artificial inflation. Chamberlai­n said Musk and Tesla “artificial­ly drove the price of Tesla shares up as much as US$45.47 from their August 6, 2018 closing price (US$341.99).”

The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulator contacted Tesla to inquire whether Musk’s statements were factual and why the disclosure was made on Twitter rather than in a regulatory filing, according to media reports.

Musk has done little to hide his disdain toward financial speculator­s, whom he regularly mocks on his Twitter account.

In a blog post, he said going private would liberate the company from the quarterly reporting cycle, allowing it to be “free from as much distractio­n and short-term thinking as possible.”

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ELON MUSK

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