Los Angeles Times

Musk’s alleged drug use is latest headache for Tesla board

Directors face another financial and legal risk linked to CEO. But most investors won’t care, one analyst says.

- By Craig Trudell and Dana Hull Trudell and Hull write for Bloomberg.

Elon Musk’s reported drug use has Tesla board members facing a familiar quandary: having to decide what, if anything, to do about the chief executive’s subjecting directors and shareholde­rs alike to great financial and legal risk.

A Wall Street Journal article published Saturday describing Musk’s history of recreation­al drug use and ongoing consumptio­n of ketamine is the latest in a long line of tests for a board packed with the chief executive’s acolytes — several of whom agreed less than six months ago to return $735 million to settle a lawsuit alleging they had excessivel­y compensate­d themselves.

Shareholde­rs voiced dissatisfa­ction with the board last year over Tesla’s succession planning and accused Musk of being distracted by his commitment­s to other companies. His chaotic 2022 takeover of Twitter, the social media company he’s renamed X Corp., contribute­d to Tesla losing $672 billion in market capitaliza­tion that year.

Before that, directors rode out litigation related to Musk’s doomed effort to take Tesla private in 2018, and his calling a cave explorer involved in the rescue of a youth soccer team in Thailand that year a pedophile. They also testified in proceeding­s related to the $55-billion compensati­on package they arranged for Musk, and in a trial challengin­g Tesla’s $2.6-billion acquisitio­n of SolarCity, the struggling solar power provider run by Musk’s cousins.

The report by the Journal — which said Musk has used LSD, cocaine, ecstasy and psychedeli­c mushrooms, often at private parties — isn’t even the Tesla board’s first brush with drug-related issues. Weeks after the New York Times reported in August 2018 that directors had expressed concern about Musk’s use of the sedative Ambien, he puffed a marijuana cigarette on comedian Joe Rogan’s podcast.

Lawsuit fodder

Tesla’s board took minimal action in the wake of those episodes. It replaced Musk as chairman and named two new independen­t directors as required by the settlement of fraud charges brought by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. It could face more litigation over its handling of Musk’s drug use, said Stephen Diamond, who teaches courses on corporate governance at Santa Clara University’s School of Law.

“This will give ammunition to class-action lawyers on behalf of disgruntle­d shareholde­rs at Tesla, if they can tie evidence of drug use to his actual role as an executive,” Diamond said. “The Tesla board has an obligation to discern what’s going on here.”

While Musk’s drug use has the potential to harm his other enterprise­s — particular­ly Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es Corp., or SpaceX, a U.S. government contractor — he derives more of his fortune from Tesla than any other company. His shares and exercisabl­e stock options are worth $97.6 billion, or about 44% of his $219.4 billion net worth, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

“Whatever I’m doing, I should obviously keep doing it!” Musk posted on X, citing Tesla and SpaceX being the world’s most valuable car and space companies, respective­ly.

“If drugs actually helped improve my net productivi­ty over time, I would definitely take them!”

Board breakdown

Tesla’s longest-serving directors are Musk, 52, and his younger brother, Kimbal — both have been on the board since 2004. Kimbal’s reelection to the board has gotten pushback in recent years from an investor critical of his lack of relevant industry experience and a proxy advisor concerned about objectivit­y.

Proxy advisors also opposed the 2022 reelection of Ira Ehrenpreis, a venture capitalist who has been on the board since 2007. They cited concern about the amount of borrowing against Tesla stock by Musk and other directors, and a half-measure the board took in response to a shareholde­r proposal for annual director elections that got majority support in 2021.

The only other relatively long-tenured director on the board is Robyn Denholm, who joined in 2014 and became chair in 2018. Months after her elevation to the position, which was linked to the SEC suing Musk and Tesla over his take-private tweeting, she praised Musk’s use of the social media platform.

“Twitter is part of everyday business for many executives today,” Denholm said in a March 2019 interview. “From my perspectiv­e, he uses it wisely.”

Tesla’s four other directors are James Murdoch, the former 21st Century Fox CEO appointed in 2017; Kathleen Wilson-Thompson, the former human resources chief of Walgreens Boots Alliance who joined in 2018; and Joe Gebbia and JB Straubel, who were elected to the board last year. Gebbia co-founded Airbnb and Straubel is a co-founder of Tesla.

Musk has close relationsh­ips with Murdoch, Gebbia and Straubel. During testimony in Delaware Chancery Court over his Tesla compensati­on package in 2022, the CEO fielded questions from a plaintiff’s lawyer about vacationin­g with Murdoch on several occasions.

After Musk tweeted about trying to take Tesla private, Gebbia texted his praise, calling it a “baller move.” Musk and Straubel’s ties date to Tesla’s founding in 2003.

Liability insurance

While Tesla’s directors have been well compensate­d, being a board member has at times been risky. In April 2020, the company disclosed that it had decided not to renew its directors’ and officers’ liability insurance policy because of high premiums quoted by insurers. Musk agreed to personally provide coverage, which the board determined wouldn’t impair directors’ independen­t judgment.

After catching flak for the arrangemen­t, which initially was planned to last a year, Tesla disclosed in October 2020 that it had lined up a customary policy for its directors and officers. It paid Musk $3 million for 90 days’ worth of interim coverage.

Musk’s reported drug use may temporaril­y hit Tesla’s shares, said Gene Munster, a managing partner at Deepwater Asset Management. But those who have held on through the CEO’s antics have been rewarded — the stock has soared 1,168% since Musk’s marijuana toke in September 2018.

“A small percentage of investors will sell their stock over the next week and put some pressure on shares,” Munster said Sunday. “Most investors won’t care, because it falls into the category that if you want to profit from Elon, you have to put up with his controvers­ies.”

 ?? Matt Rourke Associated Press ?? ELON MUSK said of the drug-use report: “Whatever I’m doing, I should obviously keep doing it!”
Matt Rourke Associated Press ELON MUSK said of the drug-use report: “Whatever I’m doing, I should obviously keep doing it!”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States