After announcing more job cuts, Tesla board rallies retail investors to vote for Elon Musk’s $56 billion pay package

By Dana Hull and Anders Melin | Bloomberg

Tesla Inc. is looking to woo its unusually large base of retail investors to get approval for Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk’s $56 billion pay package.

To help lead that drive, the company’s board has hired a strategic adviser, according to a person familiar with the matter. To bolster the campaign, the adviser is working with an outside law firm, the person said.

The adviser has set up a dedicated Vote Tesla website to encourage participation among retail investors, who hold an estimated 42% of shares in the company. It urges shareholders to cast votes online, by QR code, by phone and by mail. It also features a video with board Chair Robyn Denholm, who says supporting Musk’s pay is critical to Tesla’s growth.

RELATED: Tesla chops hundreds more Bay Area jobs as tech industry layoffs widen

That’s all ahead of Tesla’s June 13 annual meeting, when investors in the electric-car maker will vote on whether to uphold a 2018 compensation agreement. A Delaware judge vetoed the package three months ago, writing in her opinion that Tesla directors hadn’t looked out for the best interests of investors.

“We don’t believe one judge’s opinion should void the will of millions of votes cast by all of the owners,” Denholm says in the video on the Vote Tesla website.

While the vote is only advisory, it could have big implications for the future of Musk’s leadership. Securing majority approval would bolster the board’s arguments that the Delaware court was wrong. A loss would be a major embarrassment.

Musk has threatened to develop products outside of Tesla if he doesn’t attain at least a 25% equity stake in the carmaker — a key part of the voided pay package. If the remuneration deal is reinstated, the CEO has enough options to almost double his current holding in Tesla and land at roughly 21%. The path for Musk to attain that larger stake becomes unclear if shareholders don’t vote it through.

On Musk’s social media platform X, Tesla fans have been voicing their support for the CEO. In hundreds of posts tagged #VotedTesla24, many users who say they’re investors claim to have already cast their ballots. Musk himself has urged shareholders to participate, reposting messages from people like self-described “Fangirl of Elon,” Alexandra Merz.

Merz, a Santa Barbara, California, resident known as “Tesla Boomer Mama” on X, has created tools to help Tesla shareholders write to large index funds and ask to vote shares that may be held in retirement accounts or other accounts they don’t manage directly.

 

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