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By Trisha Thadani —

Tesla investors ask board to make Musk work full-time

A group of activist Tesla shareholders sent a letter to board chair Robyn Denholm Wednesday calling for guarantees that CEO Elon Musk devote at least 40 hours a week to the electric vehicle maker after spending much of the past year focused on federal politics.

The letter was signed by SOC Investment Group, which is sponsored by a coalition of labor unions, and other small investors that together own about 7.9 million Tesla shares – a minuscule fraction of the companyโ€™s 3.22 billion outstanding shares. It comes amid investor and employee frustration over the impact Muskโ€™s role with the Trump administration has had on the companyโ€™s sales and reputation.

Teslaโ€™s most recent earnings call last month revealed a 71 percent drop in profits and a 13 percent slide in sales compared to the same time in 2024. Experts and analysts largely attribute that hit to Muskโ€™s work with the U.S. DOGE Service, where he has inspired sweeping job and budget cuts in the federal government. The companyโ€™s stock has fallen about 24 percent from a high in December 2024, though it has recovered in recent days as the billionaire says he is retreating from Washington politics to refocus on his companies.

โ€œThe current crisis at Tesla puts into sharp focus the long-term problems at the company stemming from the CEOโ€™s absence, which is amplified by a Board that appears largely uninterested and unwilling to act in the best interest of all Tesla shareholders by demanding Muskโ€™s full-time attention on Tesla,โ€ the letter said. โ€œTeslaโ€™s stock price volatility, declining sales, as well as disconcerting reports regarding the companyโ€™s human rights practices, and a plummeting global reputation are cause for serious concern,โ€

Musk, Denholm and Tesla did not respond to requests for comment.

The letter also calls on Denholm to create a clear, long- and short-term succession plan for management and to outline a policy that specifically limits outside board commitments at other public and private companies. The shareholders also urge the board to appoint โ€œat least one new truly independent director with no personal ties to other Board members.โ€

Teslaโ€™s board has been criticized in the past for its deference to Musk. In a December 2024 ruling against restoring a $56 billion pay package that the board granted Musk in 2018, a Delaware judge criticized Muskโ€™s close ties to members of the board, which include his brother. That case, brought in 2018 by a shareholder with only nine Tesla shares, prompted Musk to reincorporate Tesla in Texas.

Last month, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month that Teslaโ€™s board was searching for a new CEO. Denholm called the report โ€œabsolutely falseโ€ in a post on X, writing, โ€œthe Board is highly confident in [Muskโ€™s] ability to continue executing on the exciting growth plan ahead.โ€

Several of the signatories in Wednesdayโ€™s letter were also part of a group last year that opposed the ratification of Muskโ€™s 2018 pay package, saying the CEO was too distracted by his several other companies. At the time, the group of investors said that โ€œthe Board continues to allow Musk to be overcommitted, not demanding that he devote his attention to his role as CEO and โ€˜Technokingโ€™ of Tesla.โ€

Content from the Washington Post is provided free for readers of City Desk ABQ.

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1 Comment

  1. They should ask him to send an email with three bullet points of what he did that day. Rage tweeting doesn’t count.

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