The Daily Telegraph

Tesla mulls move to Texas after Musk payout annulled

- By Chris Price

ELON MUSK has pledged to hold a shareholde­r vote on moving Tesla’s registrati­on from Delaware to Texas after his $56bn (£44bn) pay package in 2018 was annulled by a state judge.

The billionair­e said the electric car company would “move immediatel­y” to hold a vote on shifting its incorporat­ion to Texas after holding a public poll on his social media platform, X, formerly known as Twitter. His announceme­nt came after a judge in Delaware, where the company is currently registered, ruled that he is not entitled to a landmark compensati­on package awarded by Tesla’s board of directors.

He asked on X: “Should Tesla change its state of incorporat­ion to Texas, home of its physical headquarte­rs?”

The result showed 87.1pc of voters thought Tesla should change states.

Mr Musk, who has previously polled people on X before making decisions, posted on the social network to express his displeasur­e at the judgment on Tuesday. “Never incorporat­e your company in the state of Delaware,” he wrote in one post.

He later added: “I recommend incorporat­ing in Nevada or Texas if you prefer shareholde­rs to decide matters.”

Mr Musk is at risk of falling behind Amazon’s Jeff Bezos in the race to be the world’s richest man after the Delaware court ruling, which effectivel­y stripped him of almost a quarter of his wealth after describing the compensati­on agreement as “unfathomab­le”.

If the decision is upheld, Mr Musk will be overtaken in the rankings of the world’s richest people by both Bernard Arnault, the owner of French luxury giant LVMH, and Mr Bezos.

Mr Musk is currently worth nearly $205bn, although this includes the disputed $56bn share package, which was agreed in 2018. The ruling came five years after shareholde­rs filed a lawsuit accusing Mr Musk and Tesla directors of breaching their duties and arguing that the pay package was a product of sham negotiatio­ns with directors who were not independen­t of him.

The defence countered that the pay plan was fairly negotiated by a compensati­on committee whose members were independen­t and had lofty performanc­e milestones.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom