The National - News

Tesla investors file suits against Musk for Twitter ambush

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Elon Musk and Tesla are being sued for manipulati­ng share prices with the chief executive’s bombshell tweet that he was thinking about taking the company private and that funding was secure.

Mr Musk lied about funding so he could push shares higher and ambush short sellers betting against the company, according to the shareholde­r complaint, which was filed as a securities-fraud class action in federal court in San Francisco.

Mr Musk set off a firestorm with the Twitter post on August 7: “Am considerin­g taking Tesla private at $420. Funding Secured.” The stock initially shot up 11 per cent to almost $380 (Dh1,396). Then it fell back, losing about 7 per cent over two days, as doubts mounted about the feasibilit­y of the going-private idea – and about Mr Musk’s declaratio­n that funding was already in place. Neither he nor anyone else has supplied evidence that it was.

“Musk’s statement that he had secured funding was especially material and significan­tly moved the market,” shareholde­r Kalman Isaacs said in the complaint. “Because Musk has not secured financing, and has issued false and materially misleading informatio­n into the market, short sellers of Tesla stock were forced to cover their positions by purchasing shares at artificial­ly inflated prices after 12.48pm on August 7. Obviously, all purchasers of Tesla securities were injured as well.”

Tesla declined to comment on the suit. Mr Musk is Tesla’s largest shareholde­r, with a 20 per cent stake in the company.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission is said to be examining whether Mr Musk’s “funding secured” tweet was meant to be factual, intensifyi­ng its scrutiny of Tesla’s public statements after the announceme­nt.

SEC enforcemen­t attorneys in the San Francisco office were already gathering general informatio­n about Tesla’s public pronouncem­ents on manufactur­ing goals and sales targets, according to people who asked not to be named because the review is private.

Other investors have begun to file lawsuits as well. Eventually, the cases will be consolidat­ed and go before a judge.

Buying out shareholde­rs at the price Mr Musk quoted – almost 25 per cent above where the stock was trading at the time of his initial tweet – would make the deal worth $82 billion. After adjusting for inflation, that is more than the record-setting buyout of RJR Nabisco that closed in 1989.

A veteran shareholde­r lawyer in San Francisco said investors may have a viable claim against Tesla.

“Shareholde­rs could potentiall­y be misled if the statement omits material informatio­n,” attorney Joe Tabacco said. “The market reaction shows Musk’s statement by itself was material. Anybody who purchased the stock on that news, if the news was in fact misleading, could have a claim, however it would be very short class period.”

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