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Musk hijacks Tesla earnings call to vouch for US$1 tril pay plan

Dana Hull & Ed Ludlow / Bloomberg
Dana Hull & Ed Ludlow / Bloomberg • 3 min read
Musk hijacks Tesla earnings call to vouch for US$1 tril pay plan
Tesla's earnings report was a largely disappointing one, with profit missing Wall Street’s estimates despite record vehicle deliveries.
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(Oct 23): Elon Musk, the world’s richest person, spent the end of Tesla Inc’s earnings call pleading with investors to approve his US$1 trillion (RM4.2 trillion) pay package and blasting the shareholder advisory firms that have come out against the proposal.

“There needs to be enough voting control to give a strong influence, but not not so much that I can’t be fired if I go insane,” Musk said, interrupting his chief financial officer as the more than hour-long call wrapped up.

It was classic Musk: a fiery end to what had otherwise been a ho-hum call largely devoted to Tesla’s artificial intelligence, humanoid robot and self-driving initiatives. Shareholders will vote on the pay package at Tesla’s Nov 6 annual meeting in Austin.

Its earnings report was a largely disappointing one, with profit missing Wall Street’s estimates despite record vehicle deliveries. Operating income plunged 40% in the third quarter, reflecting ongoing strains on the electric-vehicle business that’s being buffeted by changing US policies.

Costs are rising sharply for Tesla, which revealed an impact of more than US$400 million last quarter from tariffs. Its operating expenses soared 50% to US$3.4 billion in the period.

Tesla shares dropped 3.8% as of 8:33am Thursday in pre-market trading in New York. The stock is up almost 9% for the year, trailing the 14% advance by the S&P 500 Index.

See also: GIC accuses EV maker Nio of inflating revenue

‘Unmitigated concerns’

Proxy advisers Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis have recommended that investors reject the unprecedented payout to Musk, the value of which is dependent on Tesla reaching a litany of market value thresholds and operational milestones. ISS cited “unmitigated concerns” with the magnitude and design of the award, while Glass Lewis took issue with its potential to dilute other shareholders’ ownership.

Musk emphasised, as he has in the past, that sufficient voting control matters more to him than monetary compensation from Tesla.

See also: GIC files securities lawsuit against EV maker Nio in US

“I just don’t feel comfortable building a robot army here, and then being ousted because of some asinine recommendations from ISS and Glass Lewis, who have no freaking clue,” he said.

After Musk was finished, Tesla CFO Vaibhav Taneja resumed his closing remarks, praising the “amazing job” the special board committee did in constructing the award.

“There’s nothing which gets passed on until the time shareholders make substantial returns,” Taneja said, urging shareholders two more times to vote in favour of the plan.

Musk, 54, ranks number one on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index with a net worth of about US$455 billion.

Uploaded by Magessan Varatharaja

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