Toronto Star

Tesla goes all in on Musk with $2.6-billion award

Pay deal underscore­s company’s ambitions and crucial role the CEO will play in its success

- ANDERS MELIN, BRANDON KOCHKODIN AND DANA HULL BLOOMBERG

NEW YORK— It is the Elon Musk of corporate pay deals, a cocksure, all-or-nothing moon shot into history. Little wonder, then, that it is for none other than Elon Musk.

Tesla Inc. granted the billionair­e founder a $2.6-billion (U.S) award, the largesteve­r of its kind, underscori­ng the company’s outsize ambitions and how intimately connected its future success is to Musk. If fully vested over a decade, stock options would net him as much as $55.8 billion. Along the way, nothing would be guaranteed — zero salary or cash bonuses.

The audacious award outlines a plan for Tesla to become one of the world’s biggest companies, which would make Musk perhaps the richest man on the planet in the process, but without as detailed a road map to get there as was provided with his last award. This, too, is very Musk-like — set big-picture, moon shot end goals, particular­s be damned.

“It’s breathtaki­ng both in size and in terms of performanc­e required to earn it,” Steven Hall, managing director of compensati­on consulting firm Steven Hall & Partners, said of Musk’s grant.

“Like everything Musk is involved in . . . this is beyond expectatio­n.” STEVEN HALL MANAGING DIRECTOR OF STEVEN HALL & PARTNERS

“Like everything Musk is involved in, whether it’s building a company from scratch or launching satellites into space, this is beyond expectatio­n,” he said.

The award, granted Sunday, appears to be Tesla’s way to put to rest questions of Musk’s future at the company, since the award is contingent on him remaining chief executive officer, or executive chairperso­n and chief product officer. The plan laid out in a statement Tuesday leaves open the possibilit­y for the company to “bring in another CEO who would report to Elon.”

Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas wrote in a December report that investors widely expect Musk to devote more time to his rocket company Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es Corp. and said this could lead to a merger with Tesla. Famed investor Jim Chanos, who’s been vocal about shorting Tesla since at least 2016, also said in an interview last month that he expects Musk will leave the company for SpaceX.

Musk has also embarked on several other ventures, including artificial intelligen­ce researcher OpenAI, brain-machine interface developer Neuralink and tunnel digger Boring Co.

While Musk’s 2012 grant was linked to developmen­t and production of electric cars, his new package of 20.3 million options is tied solely to financials — raising Tesla’s market value to $650 billion, roughly in line with Amazon.com Inc., and boosting either revenue or adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on. The grant vests in 12 increments if both market value hurdles and either one of the financial goals are met. The grant will require shareholde­r approval at a meeting in March.

While Tesla has struggled with manufactur­ing issues that have raised question about its ability to mass-produce cars, the company has met the production target of 300,000 vehicles outlined in Musk’s 2012 grant. The one remaining milestone is a gross margin of 30 per cent for four consecutiv­e quarters.

Tesla’s margin has averaged about 21 per cent during the last four quarters, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The opportunit­y to acquire more shares will also enable Musk to continue to use his Tesla holdings to back personal loans, which he’s done for several years. Musk had 11.5 million shares pledged as collateral as of April 20, a filing shows.

Tesla valued the award at $2.6 billion, even after applying a discount to the value because Musk can’t sell any shares for at least five years after he exercises his options. The 10-figure award dwarfs other mega-grants offered in recent years, including the $376 million in stock Apple Inc. granted to CEO Tim Cook in 2011, and the more than $100-million packages Oracle Corp. awarded to three executives in September.

If the award fully vests, Musk would own a 28-per-cent stake in the company worth about $184 billion, vaulting him to the top of the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. Amazon’s Jeff Bezos currently sits atop the index with anet worth of $111.5 billion as of Monday. Musk’s stake in SpaceX constitute­s about half of his current net worth of $21.5 billion.

“Musk’s goal is not to just electrify Silicon Valley, or California, or the U.S. He wants to electrify the world,” James Albertine, a Consumer Edge Research analyst, wrote in a report to clients. He said Tesla’s proposed compensati­on package “goes a long way to accomplish­ing such a task.”

 ?? PETER PARKS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? If the award from Tesla fully vests, Elon Musk would be vaulted to the top of the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.
PETER PARKS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO If the award from Tesla fully vests, Elon Musk would be vaulted to the top of the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

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