Business Day

I have too much work on my plate for sure, mogul says

- Leika Kihara

Billionair­e Elon Musk said on Monday he was working “at the absolute most amount ... from morning till night, seven days a week” when asked about his acquisitio­n of Twitter and his leadership of carmaker Tesla.

“I have too much work on my plate, that is for sure,” Musk said by video link to a business conference on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Bali.

Musk is CEO of both companies and also runs rocket firm SpaceX, brain-chip start-up Neuralink and tunnelling firm the Boring Company.

Wearing a batik shirt sent by the organisers, he appeared on screen lit by candles, explaining that he was speaking from a place that had just lost power.

Tesla investors worry that Musk, a self-confessed “nano-manager” who has been personally involved in workinglev­el decisions from car styling to supply chain issues, is distracted at a critical time for the world’s largest electric vehicle manufactur­er.

Tesla’s shares have halved in value since early April, when he disclosed he had taken a stake in Twitter. His Tesla share sales, including another $4bn last week to bring his Twitter-related sales to $20bn, have added to the pressure.

When asked about the complexity of industrial supply chains “decoupling” from China and the risks from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Musk returned to how busy he was.

Responding to an observatio­n that many business leaders in Asia wanted to be the “Elon Musk of the East,” Musk said: “I’d be careful what you wish for. I’m not sure how many people would actually like to be me. They would like to be what they imagine being me, which is not the same thing as actually being me.

“The amount that I torture myself is next level, frankly.”

Musk also said he wanted to see Twitter support more video and longer-form video so that content creators could make a living on the platform, but did not provide details. His remarks were streamed live on Alphabet’s YouTube.

Indonesia has been trying to secure a deal with Tesla on battery investment and potentiall­y one for SpaceX to develop a rocket launch site.

Musk made no commitment to either of those but said Indonesia had a large role to play in the electric vehicle supply chain and that it would make sense “long term” for SpaceX to have multiple launch points around the globe.

It was not clear where Musk was during the Bali event. His personal jet has remained in Austin, Texas, Tesla’s headquarte­rs since the weekend, according to @ElonJet, a Twitter account that tracks Musk’s Gulfstream G650.

“I’m just looking at this video and it’s so bizarre,” Musk said.

“I’m sitting here in the dark surrounded by candles.”

He added he believed that the economy would make the transition to sustainabl­e energy, adding it was “just a question of how long it takes”.

He said space exploratio­n should remain a priority “so we can understand the nature of the universe and our place in it.

“Maybe we’ll find alien civilisati­on or discover civilisati­ons that existed millions of years ago, but we see the ruins of ancient civilisati­ons. I think that would be incredibly interestin­g,” he said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Candle-lit video call: Elon Musk on the screen as he speaks virtually during the B20 summit, ahead of the G20 leaders’ summit, in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia, on Monday.
/Reuters Candle-lit video call: Elon Musk on the screen as he speaks virtually during the B20 summit, ahead of the G20 leaders’ summit, in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia, on Monday.

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