Imperial Valley Press

As Musk admits to job stress, Tesla’s board may have to act

- BY TOM KRISHER AND STAN CHOE

Elon Musk’s erratic behavior was front and center again this week as the CEO of Tesla conceded that he’s overwhelme­d by job stress, pushing his electric car company’s stock down and bringing pressure on its board to take action.

Musk’s revelation, in a Thursday interview with The New York Times, came as government regulators are reportedly investigat­ing whether his recent out-of-the-blue tweet about taking Tesla private violated disclosure requiremen­ts.

Now, experts say Tesla has reached an intersecti­on where the board must decide the direction of its leadership. Among their suggestion­s: Remove Musk as CEO, permanentl­y or via a temporary leave of absence, or appoint a No. 2 executive who could act as a steadying hand.

“It’s kind of bizarre,” said Charles Elson, director of the corporate governance center at the University of Delaware. “It’s a drama we shouldn’t be watching.”

Tesla presents plenty of challenges for the top executive: It routinely loses money and is burning through cash as it ramps up developmen­t of its Model 3 sedan, a less-expensive electric car it hopes appeals to the mass market. A large number of investors known as short-sellers have bet against the company.

Musk has added to those pressures with lofty projection­s for profits and production that Tesla often fails live up to. Plus, the eccentric billionair­e is the head of at least two other companies, including the rocket company Space X.

Musk admitted to the Times that the past year has been the most “difficult and painful” of his career. The newspaper reported that during an hour-long telephone interview on Thursday, an emotional Musk acknowledg­ed that he was working up to 120 hours a week and sometimes takes Ambien to get to sleep.

Yet he said he has no plans to give up his dual role as Tesla’s chairman and CEO.

“If you have anyone who can do a better job, please let me know. They can have the job. Is there someone who can do the job better? They can have the reins right now,” he told the paper.

Tesla’s board showed no sign of taking action on Friday. In a statement to The Associated Press, directors praised Musk’s leadership, saying he had put hundreds of thousands of popular cars on the road, created tens of thousands of jobs and created significan­t returns for shareholde­rs. Musk was not involved in crafting the statement.

Shares of Tesla Inc. tumbled about 9 percent, closing Friday at $305.50, their lowest level since Aug. 1. For the week, the company shares lost 14 percent, or $8.5 billion in market value.

Recent developmen­ts put board members in a difficult position because Musk, who entered Tesla as a major investor and built the company into a force that has changed the perception of electric cars, is the company’s public identity.

But Erik Gordon, a University of Michigan business and law professor, said the board has a duty to shareholde­rs.

“If the board does not get him out of this slot at a minimum on a leave of absence basis, I think the board is going to be seen by a lot of people who love the company as being derelict in their duties,” Gordon said Friday.

The board has stood behind Musk despite some bizarre behavior. For instance, in a recent tweet he labeled a diver who aided in the cave rescue of Thai soccer players as a pedophile. He later apologized.

But a tweet Musk said he fired off on Aug. 7 while driving to the airport may force the board to act. In it, Musk said he had “funding secured” to take Tesla private.

Investors pushed Tesla’s shares up 11 percent in a day, boosting its value by $6 billion.

 ??  ?? In this March 9, 2013, file photo, Electric car maker Tesla’s CEO Elon Musk gives the opening keynote at the SXSW Interactiv­e Festival in Austin, Texas. AP PHOTO/JACK PLUNKETT
In this March 9, 2013, file photo, Electric car maker Tesla’s CEO Elon Musk gives the opening keynote at the SXSW Interactiv­e Festival in Austin, Texas. AP PHOTO/JACK PLUNKETT

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States