Rob Jackson and I published on the University of Chicago’s ProMarket forum three posts on the governance of Tesla at this critical juncture:
“The Elephant in Tesla’s Boardroom,” available here (
promarket.org/2024/06/06/the…), explains how Musk’s threat to move AI projects outside of Tesla, and the Board’s failure to get Musk to withdraw this threat, may distort the decisions of Tesla investors in the ratification vote this week.
“Tesla Investors Deserve Musk’s Attention,” available here (
promarket.org/2024/06/07/tes…), shines light on a key flaw of Tesla’s current strategy with respect to Musk’s pay; this strategy would fail, as Tesla has failed in the past, to limit the time and effort Musk spends on endeavors other than Tesla. Rather than ask stockholders to hope that Musk would focus on the company, Tesla’s board should seek contractual limits on the time and effort Musk spend on such outside endeavors.
“Tesla is Short on Director Independence,” available here (
promarket.org/2024/06/08/tes…), argues that insufficient attention is being paid to the board’s failure to use the coming meeting to bolster board director independence and thereby address the serious “controlled mindset” problem stressed by the court decision.
Altogether, the posts in this series show that, in the aftermath of the Delaware court decision invalidating Musk’s large pay grant, Tesla’s Board is not trying to learn form the decision and improve its governance. To the contrary, the Board seems to be doubling down.
Any comments would be most welcome!
@Tesla @elonmusk @Teslaconomics @andrewrsorkin @ZoharGoshen @RonBaronAnalyst @jimcramer @CathieDWood @evafox @SteveSosnick @neiltyson @SawyerMerritt @ICannot_Enough @TeslaBoomerMama @DogeDesigner @GailAlfarATX @MarioNawfal @dhaval_shroff @jhall @heydave7 @stocktalkweekly @wholemars @medicgordus @RJarborg @KanekoaTheGreat @annmlipton @profEricTalley @Tony_J_Casey
#Tesla #ElonMusk #TeslaInvestors #TSLA #ShareholderVote #CorporateGovernance #InvestorInsights