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Shareholders must vote on Musk’s return as Tesla chairman

Oct 11, 2018 | 1:45 PM

If Tesla CEO Elon Musk wants to return as chairman, shareholders will have to vote on it.

The requirement is detailed in a court brief filed jointly on Thursday by Tesla and the Securities and Exchange Commission. The brief was required by a federal judge who must approve a securities fraud settlement reached with Musk and the company last month.

Musk and Tesla agreed to pay $20 million each and make concessions to settle an SEC lawsuit alleging Musk duped investors with statements about a plan to take the company private.

The settlement allows Musk to remain CEO but requires him to relinquish his role as chairman for at least three years. After that time, a majority of shareholders must approve Musk’s return to lead the company’s board.

U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan ordered the brief to show the settlement was “fair and reasonable,” which is a common practice in the court. She has yet to rule on the agreements with Musk and Tesla.

The SEC accused Musk of committing securities fraud due to an Aug. 7 tweet in which he declared he had secured to finance taking the company private at $420 per share, a huge premium over the stock price at the time.

The commission alleged that Musk hadn’t locked up the estimated $25 billion to $50 billion that it would have required to pull off that deal, and wanted to punish him by forcing him out as Tesla’s CEO.

Initially rejecting an SEC offer to settle the case, Musk relented two days after the fraud complaint and agreed to resolve the matter by paying the penalty, stepping down as chairman and agreeing to oversight about his communications on company news.

But the deal didn’t prevent the free-wheeling Musk from continuing to speak out about other subjects, apparently to include mocking the SEC.

No mention was made in the brief about Musk insulting the commission on twitter Oct. 4, so he apparently won’t face any punishment for that. A message was left Thursday with the SEC seeking comment.

Musk taunted the securities agency just days after the Sept. 29 settlement was announced, calling it the “Shortseller Enrichment Commission” before snidely praising it for “doing incredible work.”

The tweet stoked Musk’s long-running feud with short sellers, a category of investors that have been betting on Tesla’s stock to fall.

Musk, 47, has rarely seemed hesitant to make provocative statements to his more than 22 million followers on Twitter. He is now defending himself against a defamation lawsuit filed by a diver who helped save 12 boys on a Thai soccer team from a flooded cave. Musk described the diver as a pedophile in a tweet that has since been deleted.

As part of Musk’s settlement with the SEC, Tesla is supposed to monitor its CEO’s Twitter posts, but only those that have to do with company news.

Shares of Tesla fell 1.6 per cent Thursday afternoon to $252.86 as the broader markets declined.

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Krisher reported from Detroit. Michael Liedtke contributed from San Francisco.

Tom Krisher, The Associated Press