The Oklahoman

Musk-less Tesla?

- BY DANA HULL, KEITH NAUGHTON AND DAVID WELCH Bloomberg

A U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit has raised questions about Elon Musk’s future at Tesla, sending shares spiraling.

It’s nearly impossible to imagine Tesla without Elon Musk, its chairman, CEO, largest shareholde­r and public face.

But a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit has raised questions about the executive’s future at the cleanenerg­y company, sending shares spiraling. The agency accuses Musk, 47, of misleading investors with his infamous Aug. 7 tweets about taking Tesla private. The two sides reportedly came close to a settlement before Musk backed out and the SEC filed a complaint seeking to ban him from serving as a director or officer.

That possibilit­y, however remote, casts a pall on the final days of a rocky quarter and is likely to renew concerns about Tesla’s lack of an operating chief or other clear No. 2. This weekend was supposed to be one for celebrator­y milestones, with thousands of Model 3 sedans finally making their way to customers at delivery centers across the country as the company makes a final push to achieve sustainabl­e profits. Instead, drama surroundin­g Musk is once again taking center stage.

“If Elon Musk resigns or is not the CEO, Tesla is a fundamenta­lly different company that is less attractive to us,” said Ross Gerber, chief executive officer of Gerber Kawasaki in Santa Monica, California, which holds Tesla stock.

Tesla shares slumped as much as 13 percent to $268.10 on Friday, the biggest intraday drop in more than three years. The company’s 5.3 percent bonds declined 1.49 cents to 84.81 cents on the dollar, according to Trace bond price data.

Musk pulled out of a settlement with the SEC in which he and Tesla would have had to pay a nominal fine, CNBC reported, citing sources it didn’t identify. While the CEO wouldn’t have had to admit any guilt, Musk would have been barred from being chairman for two years, and Tesla would have been required to appoint two new independen­t directors, CNBC said.

Aside from the drama surroundin­g Musk’s tweet saying Tesla may go private — and his decision less than three weeks later to stay public — the company has been grappling with the departure of several top executives, most recently its vice presidents of global supply chain management and worldwide finance. The Justice Department has also opened a fraud investigat­ion.

Tesla and its board “are fully confident in Elon, his integrity, and his leadership of the company,” directors said in a joint statement Thursday. “Our focus remains on the continued ramp of Model 3 production and delivering for our customers, shareholde­rs and employees.”

Tesla has recently emerged from months of what Musk called “production hell” and now finds itself in what he’s said is “delivery logistics hell.” The company is in a race to get its key Model 3 vehicles to customers by the end of the third quarter, which will likely lead to “huge” sales figures just as some investors flee with the SEC suit, Gerber said.

“Tesla is going to blow the sales numbers out of the water, but Elon’s stress and meltdowns over these past months have had a real impact on the company,” he said.

Musk was uncharacte­ristically silent Thursday on Twitter, but said in an emailed statement that “this unjustifie­d action by the SEC leaves me deeply saddened and disappoint­ed.” Tesla’s board, which includes Musk’s brother Kimbal Musk, is closely aligned with the CEO.

The company itself wasn’t targeted in the lawsuit.

“This was clearly a self-inflicted wound and it comes at a time that is critical for Tesla, which doesn’t need any more challenges,” said Michelle Krebs, senior analyst with researcher Autotrader. “They’re under financial pressure to turn things around and facing an onslaught of new competitor­s.”

Earlier this year, shareholde­rs rejected a proposal to split Musk’s role as chairman and CEO and awarded him an unpreceden­ted compensati­on package that paves the way for him to stay at the company.

“There’s a 50-50 chance Musk gets removed as CEO but there’s a 95 percent chance that he stays at the company,” said Gene Munster, a managing partner at venture capital firm Loup Ventures. “I think the SEC lawsuit has scared people. This may give the board the backbone to put Musk in a visionary role. Shareholde­rs want him to stay on as the visionary.”

Tesla makes the Model S sedan, Model X SUV and the Model 3 at its lone auto plant in Fremont, California. The company has huge ambitions to disrupt not just the auto industry but the energy markets by selling large batteries to utilities.

Musk has a laundry list of big, capital-intensive projects on his to-do list: to construct a factory in China, build a semi truck and Model Y crossover vehicle, deploy self-driving technology and finish developing a solar roof product.

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 ?? [AP FILE PHOTO] ?? The Tesla emblem is shown on the back end of a Model S in the Tesla showroom in Santa Monica, Calif. Tesla investors have taken a wild ride as Wall Street values the promise of one of the world’s leading electric car makers, the hurdles the company faces as it tries to become a world-class manufactur­er, and a mercurial CEO who can get the market buzzing with a single tweet.
[AP FILE PHOTO] The Tesla emblem is shown on the back end of a Model S in the Tesla showroom in Santa Monica, Calif. Tesla investors have taken a wild ride as Wall Street values the promise of one of the world’s leading electric car makers, the hurdles the company faces as it tries to become a world-class manufactur­er, and a mercurial CEO who can get the market buzzing with a single tweet.

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