Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Musk: Tesla deal still in talking stage

- By Tom Krisher

DETROIT — Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund would be the main source of money for Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s grand plan to take the company private, but the deal isn’t done yet, Musk disclosed in a blog on Monday.

The fund approached Musk about going private multiple times during the past two years, and Musk said he left a July 31 meeting with no question that the deal could be closed. That’s why he tweeted on Aug. 7 that he had “funding secured” to take the company private.

It is that phrase that may lead to trouble for Musk.

If the tweet is deemed by regulators to be a factual statement, and it was taken as such by investors who drove shares up 11 percent on that day, Musk could be at risk for securities fraud if it wasn’t entirely true.

Already there are reports that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is looking into Musk’s tweet.

Funding for the deal would come from the ultraconse­rvative kingdom’s Public Investment Fund, one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds. Founded in 1971, the fund has about $250 billion in investment­s across the world, according to the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute,

based in Las Vegas. Among its holdings is a $3.5 billion stake in the ride-sharing app Uber.

A fund spokesman in Riyadh declined to comment Monday.

Musk’s blog, posted before the markets opened Monday, didn’t impress investors much. Shares fell $3.10 to $352.39 in midday trading.

Under his proposal, only investors who don’t want to remain with a private company would be paid, and funding for the deal would come from Tesla stock, not debt. Musk wrote that he expects about one-third of shareholde­rs to take an offer of $420 per share, making the buyouts worth roughly $23.6 billion. Presumably the wealth fund and perhaps other investors

would put up the money to buy the shares and would be repaid in Tesla equity.

Musk wrote that at the July 31 meeting, the fund’s managing director “strongly expressed his support” for taking the electric car and solar panel maker private. “I understood from him that no other decision makers were needed and that they were eager to proceed,” Musk wrote in the blog.

But the deal appeared to be far from finished. Since the meeting, the men have continued discussion­s and the managing director has expressed support “subject to financial and other due diligence and their internal review process for obtaining approvals,” Musk wrote.

The wealth fund recently bought nearly 5 percent of Tesla’s shares.

The fund’s chairman is Saudi Arabia’s assertive 32-year-old Crown Prince

Mohammed bin Salman. He has used the fund as a vehicle to achieve economic goals of increasing employment in the kingdom, as well as for floating a possible public offering of the state oil giant Saudi Aramco, though that effort appears to have stalled.

Tesla has a growing following on the Arabian Peninsula, with a new showroom in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. Musk has visited the region as well and given talks.

Musk wrote in Monday’s blog that he made the Aug. 7 announceme­nt because he had talked to large investors about his desire to take the company private. “It wouldn’t be right to share informatio­n about going private with just our largest investors without sharing the same informatio­n with all investors at the same time,” he wrote.

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