Weekend Herald

Tesla’s chairwoman under scrutiny for her oversight of Elon Musk

- Natasha Frost and Jack Ewing

Elon Musk, the chief executive and public face of Tesla, is constantly making news and broadcasti­ng his opinions on his social media site X. But the electric car company has another leader — one who maintains a much lower profile.

For more than five years, Tesla’s board of directors has been led by Robyn Denholm, a technology executive who rarely speaks in public outside her native Australia and posts barely anything on X.

To some analysts and investors, Denholm is the “adult in the room” who has helped Musk turn Tesla into the world’s most valuable carmaker. But to her critics, she has failed at her most important job: Serving as a check on Musk.

Late last month, a Delaware judge sharply criticised Denholm’s leadership while striking down Musk’s 2018 compensati­on package, worth more than US$50 billion ($82b). Denholm took a “lackadaisi­cal approach to her oversight obligation­s” at Tesla, said Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick.

The judge also asked if Denholm could be independen­t from Musk, because her Tesla’s board job had earned her US$280 million-plus. In court last year, Denholm described that pay as “life changing.” It greatly exceeds what other large US companies like Apple and Alphabet, Google’s parent company, pay the independen­t chairs on their boards.

“Musk operates as if free of board oversight,” the judge said.

Musk has railed against the ruling, and he said he planned to ask shareholde­rs to authorise Tesla to move its incorporat­ion to Texas, where it’s headquarte­red. The ruling also means the board must rethink his pay.

Last month, two weeks before the Delaware ruling, Musk demanded that Tesla’s board significan­tly increase his control over the company if it wanted him to continue developing products based on artificial intelligen­ce at Tesla. Musk owns about 13 per cent of the company’s stock, and wants voting rights equivalent to at least 25 per cent of Tesla’s shares.

Denholm will be closely involved in any decision to change where the company is incorporat­ed and in talks with Musk over his pay and desire for more control. She has said nothing publicly about these matters and did not respond to an interview request.

Denholm has spent more than 40 years in operationa­l and financial jobs at big companies in Australia and the United States. She is widely considered a calm, understate­d presence with an appetite for occasional calculated risks. As chief financial officer at Juniper Networks, she resisted pressure from Wall Street to cut costs and lay off staff, defending Juniper’s plan to invest in research and developmen­t. The strategy paid off, some analysts said.

“She’s very down-to-earth, very straight, very independen­t-minded, a very relaxed character,” said Pierre Ferragu, a managing partner at New Street Research who covered Denholm at Juniper. “I don’t think you could have found a better chairman for this very unique job,” he added, referring to her selection as chair of Tesla’s board in 2018.

Perhaps the biggest risk she has taken is agreeing to lead at Tesla.

In 2022, Denholm said she had friends who had advised her not to accept Musk’s offer to lead the board after he agreed to step down as part of a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The deal stemmed from his claim, on Twitter, that he had secured the funding to take Tesla private even though that plan was in an embryonic state.

Her friends had said she would be agreeing to lead the board of a company “with a contrarian founder, and that at the time was not profitable,” Denholm is reported as saying. She turned Musk down at first, show legal filings, but he asked her again, and she agreed and resigned from her job as chief financial officer at Telstra, an Australian telco.

One of three children of European immigrants to Australia, Denholm, 60, grew up in the suburbs of Sydney, where she attended what she has described as a “garden variety public school.” On weekends and during school vacations, she helped her parents balance the books and service cars at their gas station. Denholm studied economics at the University of Sydney and started her career at Arthur Andersen, an accounting firm. She had a series of jobs at large companies including Toyota in Australia, where she was among a few female executives, and Sun Microsyste­ms and Juniper in Silicon Valley. Besides her position on Tesla’s board, Denholm serves as chair for the Tech Council of Australia.

She has owned at least three red Teslas, and, in a Sky News interview in

2014, described herself as “genuinely curious.” Her family investment office, started in 2021, has a focus on women-led tech startups and owns a

30 per cent stake in her hometown’s two basketball teams — the Sydney Kings and Sydney Flames.

Denholm was not acquainted with Musk before 2014, when a member of Tesla’s board recruited her, according to legal filings. While she has praised his vision, discipline and resilience, she has mostly avoided discussing him or his erratic comments on X.

Conor Wynn, an expert in corporate decision-making at Monash University in Melbourne, said Musk might have chosen Denholm because she was so different from him.

“You don’t want just the mad genius at the top creating stuff,” Wynn said. “You need somebody who can translate it into action, and be people-focused and keep the operations moving.”

But other experts said Denholm’s job was not just to complement Musk. As the leader of the company’s board, she has a duty to oversee the CEO and do what is best for all of the company’s shareholde­rs.

“When Denholm took over in 2018, it was hoped she would be the adult in the room, possibly even a mother figure who could tame this wild child,” said Jo-Ellen Pozner, associate professor of management at Leavey School of Business at Santa Clara University.

“That has clearly not happened.”

However, Pozner said, Denholm may not have been able to manage Musk because almost all of the other directors on Tesla’s board have personal or financial ties to him.

One board member is Musk’s brother, Kimbal.

Several others have been close to Musk personally, profession­ally or both for many years.

“It doesn’t seem like she was set up for success in reining in Elon Musk,” Pozner said.

Denholm’s job is likely to get tougher this year than it has been.

In addition to looming decisions about the company’s incorporat­ion and Musk’s demand for greater control, Tesla’s stock is down about 25 per cent this year because investors are worried about slowing sales and slumping profits.

At a conference last year, Denholm described how she dealt with uncertaint­y and doubt. Early in her career, confronted with jitters about a looming internatio­nal move, she said she called her father for advice.

“He said: ‘Robyn, what’s the worst thing that can happen? You screw up and you have to come home?”’ she told an audience in Sydney in May. “I’ve sort of taken that approach.”

 ?? Photo AP ?? Elon Musk invited Robyn Denholm to step up as chairwoman of the Tesla board in 2018.
Photo AP Elon Musk invited Robyn Denholm to step up as chairwoman of the Tesla board in 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand