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Musk says he’s winning Tesla shareholder vote on pay plan by “wide margin”

Tesla shareholder vote —

Court battle over pay plan will continue even if Musk wins shareholder vote.

Elon Musk wearing a suit and waving with his hand as he walks away from a courthouse.

Enlarge / Elon Musk.

Getty Images | Bloomberg

Elon Musk said last night that Tesla shareholders provided enough votes to re-approve his 2018 pay package, which was previously nullified by a Delaware judge. A proposal to transfer Tesla’s state of incorporation from Delaware to Texas also has enough votes to pass, according to a post by Musk.

“Both Tesla shareholder resolutions are currently passing by wide margins!” Musk wrote. His post included charts indicating that both shareholder resolutions had more than enough yes votes to surpass the “guaranteed win” threshold.

The Wall Street Journal notes that the “results provided by Musk are preliminary, and voters can change their votes until the polls close at the meeting on Thursday.” The shareholder meeting is at 3: 30 pm Central Time. An official announcement on the results is expected today.

Under a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Musk is required to get pre-approval from a Tesla securities lawyer for social media posts that may contain information material to the company or its shareholders. Tesla today submitted an SEC filing containing a screenshot of Musk’s X post describing the preliminary results, but the company otherwise did not make an announcement.

Legal uncertainty remains

The vote isn’t the last word on the pay package that was once estimated to be worth $56 billion and more recently valued at $46 billion based on Tesla’s stock price. The pay plan was nullified by a Delaware Court of Chancery ruling in January 2024 after a lawsuit filed by a shareholder.

Judge Kathaleen McCormick ruled that the pay plan was unfair to Tesla’s shareholders, saying the proxy information given to investors before 2018 was materially deficient. McCormick said that “the proxy statement inaccurately described key directors as independent and misleadingly omitted details about the process.”

As the Financial Times wrote, there would still be legal uncertainty even if shareholders re-approve the pay deal today:

In asking shareholders to approve of the same 2018 pay package that was nullified by the Delaware Court of Chancery in January, Tesla is relying on a legal principle known as “ratification,” in which the validity of a corporate action can be cemented by a shareholder vote. Ratification, the company told shareholders in a proxy note earlier this year, “will restore Tesla’s stockholder democracy.”

This instance, however, is the first time a company has tried to leverage that principle after its board was found to have breached its fiduciary duty to approve the deal in the first place.

Even Tesla admits it does not know what happens next. “The [Tesla board] special committee and its advisers noted that they could not predict with certainty how a stockholder vote to ratify the 2018 CEO performance award would be treated under Delaware law in these novel circumstances,” it said in a proxy statement sent to shareholders.

The BBC writes that “legal experts say it is not clear if a court that blocked the deal will accept the re-vote, which is not binding, and allow the company to restore the pay package.”

New lawsuit challenges re-vote

The re-vote was already being challenged in the same Delaware court that nullified the 2018 vote. Donald Ball, who owns 28,245 shares of Tesla stock, last week sued Musk and Tesla in a complaint that alleges the Tesla “Board has not disclosed a complete or fair picture” to shareholders of the impact of re-approving Musk’s pay plan.

That includes “radical tax implications for Tesla that will potentially wipe out Tesla’s pre-tax profits for the last two years,” the lawsuit said. The Ball lawsuit also alleged that “Musk has engaged in strong-arm, coercive tactics to obtain stockholder approval for both the Redomestication Vote and the Ratification Vote.”

Tesla Board Chairperson Robyn Denholm urged shareholders to re-approve the Musk pay plan, suggesting that Musk could leave Tesla or devote less time to the company if the resolution is voted down.

Musk says he’s winning Tesla shareholder vote on pay plan by “wide margin” Read More »

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Tesla chair says Elon Musk needs $46 billion pay plan to stay motivated

Elon Musk sitting down and speaking at a conference.

Enlarge / Elon Musk speaks onstage at SXSW on March 11, 2018, in Austin, Texas.

Getty Images | Diego Donamaria

Tesla Board Chairperson Robyn Denholm urged shareholders to re-approve CEO Elon Musk’s $46 billion pay package this week, saying the vote is “not about the money” while suggesting that Musk could leave Tesla or devote less time to the company if he isn’t properly compensated.

“This is obviously not about the money. We all know Elon is one of the wealthiest people on the planet, and he would remain so even if Tesla were to renege on the commitment we made in 2018,” Denholm wrote in a June 5 letter to shareholders.

Musk’s pay plan was nullified by a Delaware Court of Chancery ruling in January 2024 after a lawsuit filed by a shareholder. The ruling said that Denholm had a “lackadaisical approach to her oversight obligations” and “derived the vast majority of her wealth from her compensation as a Tesla director.” It also said most board members “were beholden to Musk or had compromising conflicts,” and that the proxy information given to shareholders before the 2018 vote was “materially deficient.”

Musk’s pay plan “is the largest potential compensation opportunity ever observed in public markets by multiple orders of magnitude—250 times larger than the contemporaneous median peer compensation plan and over 33 times larger than the plan’s closest comparison, which was Musk’s prior compensation plan,” the court ruling noted.

Tesla’s board subsequently asked shareholders to approve a transfer of Tesla’s state of incorporation from Delaware to Texas and to reinstate the pay plan, which was previously estimated to be worth $56 billion but was more recently valued at $46 billion. Votes can be submitted before Tesla’s annual meeting on June 13. A survey found that more than 80 percent of early votes were in favor of Musk’s pay package, despite some shareholders’ vocal opposition.

Lawsuit slams Musk’s “strong-arm, coercive tactics”

The pay plan and Texas move are also being challenged by a new shareholder lawsuit filed in the same Delaware court that nullified the 2018 pay package. Donald Ball, who owns 28,245 shares of Tesla stock, yesterday filed a lawsuit against Tesla, Musk, Denholm, and other board members.

The Ball lawsuit points to Musk’s January 2024 statement that he “would prefer to build products outside of Tesla” if he isn’t given 25 percent voting control. It also points to reports that “Musk has directed Nvidia to ship thousands of AI chips reserved for Tesla to X and xAI, delaying Tesla’s ability to build up its data center and AI infrastructure by several months.”

“Musk has engaged in strong-arm, coercive tactics to obtain stockholder approval for both the Redomestication Vote and the Ratification Vote,” the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit also alleges that the Tesla board has not “disclosed a complete or fair picture” to shareholders on the impact of re-approving Musk’s pay plan. The lawsuit said “there could be radical tax implications for Tesla that will potentially wipe out Tesla’s pre-tax profits for the last two years.”

Tesla chair says Elon Musk needs $46 billion pay plan to stay motivated Read More »

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Tesla asks shareholders to approve Texas move and restore Elon Musk’s $56B pay

Elon Musk wearing a suit during an event at a Tesla factory.

Enlarge / Tesla CEO Elon Musk at an opening event for Tesla’s Gigafactory on March 22, 2022, in Gruenheide, southeast of Berlin.

Getty Images | Patrick Pleul

Tesla is asking shareholders to approve a move to Texas and to re-approve a $55.8 billion pay package for CEO Elon Musk that was recently voided by a Delaware judge.

Musk’s 2018 pay package was voided in a ruling by Delaware Court of Chancery Judge Kathaleen McCormick, who found that the deal was unfair to shareholders. After the ruling, Musk said he would seek a shareholder vote on transferring Tesla’s state of incorporation from Delaware to Texas.

The proposed move to Texas and Musk’s pay package will be up for votes at Tesla’s 2024 annual meeting on June 13, Tesla Board Chairperson Robyn Denholm wrote in a letter to shareholders that was included in a regulatory filing today.

“Because the Delaware Court second-guessed your decision, Elon has not been paid for any of his work for Tesla for the past six years that has helped to generate significant growth and stockholder value,” the letter said. “That strikes us—and the many stockholders from whom we already have heard—as fundamentally unfair, and inconsistent with the will of the stockholders who voted for it.”

On the proposed move to Texas, the letter to shareholders said that “Texas is already our business home, and we are committed to it.” Moving the state of incorporation is really about operating under a state’s laws and court system, though. Incorporating in Texas “will restore Tesla’s stockholder democracy,” Denholm wrote.

Judge: Board members “were beholden to Musk”

Musk is a member of Tesla’s board. Although Musk and his brother Kimbal recused themselves from the 2018 pay-plan vote, McCormick’s ruling said that “five of the six directors who voted on the Grant were beholden to Musk or had compromising conflicts.” McCormick determined that the proxy statement given to investors for the 2018 vote “inaccurately described key directors as independent and misleadingly omitted details about the process.”

McCormick also wrote that Denholm had a “lackadaisical approach to her oversight obligations” and that she “derived the vast majority of her wealth from her compensation as a Tesla director.”

The ruling in favor of lead plaintiff and Tesla shareholder Richard Tornetta rescinded Musk’s pay package in order to “restore the parties to the position they occupied before the challenged transaction.”

Tornetta’s lawyer, Greg Varallo, declined to provide any detailed comment on Tesla’s plan for a new shareholder vote. “We are studying the Tesla proxy and will decide on any response in due course,” Varallo told Ars today.

In the new letter to shareholders, Denholm wrote that Tesla’s performance since 2018 proves that the pay package was deserved. Although Tesla’s stock price has fallen about 37 percent this year, it is up more than 630 percent since the March 2018 shareholder vote.

“We do not agree with what the Delaware Court decided, and we do not think that what the Delaware Court said is how corporate law should or does work,” Denholm wrote. “So we are coming to you now so you can help fix this issue—which is a matter of fundamental fairness and respect to our CEO. You have the chance to reinstate your vote and make it count. We are asking you to make your voice heard—once again—by voting to approve ratification of Elon’s 2018 compensation plan.”

Tesla asks shareholders to approve Texas move and restore Elon Musk’s $56B pay Read More »