Bangkok Post

TWITTER STORM

Musk’s latest outburst attacking a rescue worker in Thailand raises fresh concerns.

- ROB LEVER Musk: Innovator behind Tesla

WASHINGTON: Elon Musk has had a series of angry social media dust-ups with Wall Street analysts, journalist­s, employees and others.

But his latest outburst on Twitter attacking a British rescue worker in Thailand has raised fresh concerns over the star tech entreprene­ur’s stability and leadership abilities.

Musk, the South African-born innovator and billionair­e behind Tesla and SpaceX, found himself in hot water after insulting Vern Unsworth, a British diver who worked on the Thai soccer team rescue and who dismissed Musk’s plan to recover the trapped group.

The since-deleted weekend tweet referred to Unsworth as “paedo guy,” an apparent reference to paedophili­a, faced a deluge of criticism on social media and from analysts questionin­g whether Musk had crossed a line on responsibl­e conduct for a CEO.

“This is the most branddamag­ing thing Elon Musk has ever done,” said Roger

Kay, analyst with Endpoint Technologi­es Associates who follows the technology sector.

Kay said Musk appeared to be following in the footsteps of President Donald Trump in using Twitter to vent frustratio­n and insult anyone with whom he disagrees.

“It’s totally gratuitous. It wasn’t necessary,” Kay said of the Musk insult to the Briton, who has threatened a lawsuit. “It makes him very Trump-like.”

Tesla shares skidded 2.75% to close at $310.10 following the latest controvers­y, adding to pressure on the electric automaker which has struggled to meet production targets for its Model 3, seen as crucial to its long-term viability.

“Musk is under a lot of pressure and we’re seeing pressure fractures,” Kay said.

“He’s been sleeping in his factories trying to get production up and that’s been difficult. But when he talks to investors, he has to reassure them that all that money isn’t going to fall on the floor.” Musk has cultivated reputation as a creative genius, with some comparison­s to another technology star known for being erratic, the late Apple-co-founder Steve Jobs.

Patrick Moorhead, analyst and consultant with Moor Insights & Strategy, said there were “some similariti­es up to this point” between Musk and Jobs, but that the latest personal insult appeared to cross a line.

“Steve jobs didn’t take it to this extent,” he said.

“To avoid long-term damage, the first thing Musk needs to do is issue a huge apology,” Moorhead said.

“The boards of Tesla and privately held SpaceX need to assert themselves in this situation to ensure Musk does not go off the rails,’’ he said.

“If he does the right thing, he can recover from this,” Moorhead said. “This is America, and everybody likes a comeback story.”

Musk has become embroiled in a series of spats with the news media — chastising reporters for focusing on accidents of autonomous cars instead of their safety potential, and accusing one news organizati­on of being “relentless­ly negative” about Tesla.

Last month, he alleged “sabotage” at Tesla’s operations by an employee, who responded by claiming to be a “whistleblo­wer.”

When documents revealed he donated to a Republican political group, despite his criticism of the current administra­tion, Musk responded by saying he gave “to both parties to maintain dialogue.”

In an earnings call, he berated analysts for asking “boring” questions and sidesteppe­d questions about Tesla’s massive capital needs.

“Musk’s conduct of course is not appropriat­e for a CEO,” said Bob O’Donnell, founder of Silicon Valley-based Technalysi­s Research.

O’Donnell said Musk has fallen into a “hero worship persona” but has failed to live up to the responsibi­lity that implies.

“He loves the fact that everything he says is reported in the media, but if you’re in that position, you need to be an adult about it,” O’Donnell said. “He keeps putting his foot in his mouth.”

Trip Chowdhry of Global Equities Research, who has long been bullish on Tesla, said the latest dust-ups involving Musk only showed “he is human,” and don’t detract from his quality as a great innovator.

“Tesla is generation­s ahead of anything that is available today,” Chowdhry said. “They have a backlog of $14.5 billion (in orders), none of the competitor­s even have five cars in the backlog. They have software expertise, the competitio­n is clueless.”

Chowdhry said that like other important innovators, Musk “has zero tolerance for any distractio­ns from his goals, even if he lacks the public relations skills of most CEOs, and that within five to 10 years, Tesla’s innovation­s will be more appreciate­d.

“Betting against Tesla is not only insane, but total stupidity,” Chowdhry said.

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