Business Standard

MUSK ENDS BID TO TAKE TESLA PRIVATE

Maverick CEO’s decision raises new questions about company’s future

- ALEXANDRIA SAGE

Tesla CEO Elon Musk said late on Friday he would heed shareholde­r concerns and no longer pursue a $72 billion deal to take his US electric car maker private, abandoning an idea that had stunned investors and drawn regulatory scrutiny.

The decision leaves Tesla as a publicly listed company but raises new questions about its future. Its shares have been trading below their August 7 levels, when Musk announced on Twitter he was considerin­g taking Tesla private for $420 per share, as investors wondered what the long-shot bid meant for Musk’s ability to steer the company to profitabil­ity.

The move also leaves Musk and Tesla having to fend off a series of investor lawsuits and a US Securities and Exchange Commission investigat­ion into the factual accuracy of Musk’s tweet that funding for the deal was “secured”.

Musk said on Friday that his belief that there is more than enough funding to take the company private was reinforced during the process. He attributed his decision to abandon the bid to feedback he received from shareholde­rs and on the effort proving to be more time-consuming and distractin­g than he anticipate­d.

“Although the majority of shareholde­rs I spoke to said they would remain with Tesla if we went private, the sentiment, in a nutshell, was ‘please don’t do this’,” Musk wrote in a blog post on Friday.

Musk, who owns about a fifth of Tesla, had said earlier this month that he envisioned taking the company private without using the standard method of a leveraged buyout, whereby all the other shareholde­rs would cash out and the deal would be funded primarily with new debt.

Instead, two-thirds of company shareholde­rs, according to his estimate, would have chosen an option of “rolling” their stakes and continuing to be investors in a private company, rather than cashing out. This would significan­tly reduce the amount of money needed for the deal and avoid further burdening Tesla, which has a debt pile of $11 billion and negative cash flow.

However, Musk said on Friday that a number of institutio­nal shareholde­rs explained to him that they have internal compliance issues that limit how much they can invest in a private company.

He added that there is no proven path for most retail investors to own shares were Tesla to go private.

Musk had previously said that Saudi Arabia’s PIF, which became a Tesla shareholde­r earlier this year with a stake of just under 5 per cent, could help him fund the cash portion of the deal, though sources close to the sovereign wealth fund had played down that prospect. PIF is in talks to invest more than $1 billion in aspiring Tesla rival Lucid Motors, Reuters reported last Sunday.

Six members of Tesla’s board of directors said in a separate statement that they were informed on Thursday that Musk was abandoning his takeprivat­e bid. The board then disbanded a special committee of three directors it had set up to evaluate any offer that Musk submitted. “We fully support Elon as he continues to lead the company moving forward,” said the board statement.

One of Tesla’s biggest challenges now is ramping up production of its latest vehicle, the Model 3. Multiple “bottleneck­s” at its Fremont factory and battery factory outside Reno, Nevada have delayed volume production.

Tesla now aims to consistent­ly build 5,000 Model 3s per week, a target it says it has managed “multiple times” since first achieving it one week in June.

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 ?? REUTERS ?? Musk says shareholde­rs believe Tesla is better off as public company
REUTERS Musk says shareholde­rs believe Tesla is better off as public company

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