Philippine Daily Inquirer

TESLA’S MUSK STRIKES DEAL WITH REGULATORS OVER TWEETS

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NEW YORK— Elon Musk and US stock market regulators told a US court on Friday that they had reached a deal to settle their difference­s over the Tesla chief executive’s Twitter use.

The settlement between Musk and the Securities and Exchange Commission sets out clearer guidelines on topics Musk should avoid on Twitter or other social media, including statements about acquisitio­ns, mergers, new products and production numbers.

Musk would have to adhere to Tesla rules regarding potentiall­y significan­t comments by executives, and have tweets or other social media posts preapprove­d by “an experience­d securities lawyer employed by the company,” according to the proposed settlement.

A Friday deadline set by US District Judge Alison Nathan was extended until April 30 after Musk and the SEC asked for time to have a final version of the settlement ready to submit for court approval.

The SEC said in the filing that the settlement “is fair, reasonable, and in the interest of the parties and investors.” SEC officials had originally argued Musk should be held in contempt of court for allegedly violating an earlier settlement on tweeting potentiall­y marketsens­itive informatio­n without having it reviewed by counsel.

At a hearing earlier this month, Nathan ordered both sides to try to work out their difference­s, suggesting she could rule on the case if the talks failed.

The judge appeared sympatheti­c at times with some of the government’s arguments, but she also expressed significan­t reservatio­ns about finding Musk in contempt.

If approved, the settlement would mark a truce in Musk’s dispute with the SEC after an October agreement required him to step down as chair and pay $20 million to settle charges he defrauded investors with false claims on Twitter in August about a possible bid to take the company private, which was quickly aborted.

The SEC cracked down after Musk tweeted on Feb. 19 that Tesla would make 500,000 cars in 2019—up from the 400,000 that the company had estimated until then, an apparent increase on a benchmark tied to profitabil­ity. Musk corrected himself four hours later.

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