Elon Musk earns first performance-based payout from Tesla, worth more than $700 million
- Tesla CEO Elon Musk earned the first portion of an incentive-based stock option payout, the company confirmed in a regulatory filing today.
- Based on terms in the filings, Musk will receive the first tranche for keeping the company’s market capitalization at $100 billion along with other revenue milestones.
- A Tesla stockholder is challenging the compensation plan, alleging it is excessive and a breach of board members’ fiduciary duty.
Tesla confirmed that CEO Elon Musk earned the first tranche of his massive incentive payout, in a document filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday.
The tranche is comprised of about 1.7 million shares of Tesla, and would be valued around $775 million based on Thursday’s closing market value. Shares in Tesla closed at $805.81 on Thursday, and the options have a strike price of $350.02.
Thursday’s filing, which also set a date of July 7 for the company’s annual shareholders meeting, said:
“As of the date of this proxy statement, one of the 12 tranches under this award has vested and become exercisable, subject to Mr. Musk’s payment of the exercise price of $350.02 per share and the minimum five-year holding period generally applicable to any shares he acquires upon exercise.” It is not clear if Musk has yet exercised the options.
Musk earned the first portion of his stock options for keeping the company’s market capitalization at $100 billion on a 30-day and six-month trailing average.
According to a 2018 regulatory filing outlining the conditions for the payout, Tesla also had to hit trailing-four-quarter revenue of $20 billion or EBITDA (minus stock-based compensation) of $1.5 billion for Musk to get the tranche.
Musk does not take a salary at this point. He owned about 18.5% of the company as of May 1, according to FactSet, a stake worth around $24 billion. By Thursday, the proxy filing revealed, Musk’s stake in the company had risen to 20.8% — a total of 38.7 million shares, including 18.5 million used as collateral for the CEO’s personal debt. His full award is set to vest over 12 tranches with different milestone requirements, reaching up to $650 billion in market capitalization for Tesla.
Tesla stockholder Richard Tornetta is challenging the compensation plan in a lawsuit against Musk and members of Tesla’s board. Tornetta alleged in the lawsuit that Tesla’s board breached its fiduciary duty by awarding Musk excessive compensation.
Tesla was forced to restrict its operations during the coronavirus pandemic, to Musk’s frustration. On Tesla’s first-quarter analyst call, Musk called stay-at-home orders meant to slow the spread of the virus “fascist.”
In March, the company wound down to minimum basic operations at its Fremont, California, electric vehicle assembly plant after the county said it was not considered an essential business authorized to work during the Covid-19 health orders.
In early May, just before Tesla reopened the car plant, Tesla shares tumbled more than 10% in a single day when Musk tweeted that the stock price was “too high,” but the shares have since recovered that loss, and then some.
Musk previously agreed, as part of a settlement with the SEC, to submit public statements about Tesla’s finances for vetting by legal counsel before sharing them. The SEC initially sued Musk and Tesla after the CEO tweeted, without showing evidence, that he had secured funding to take Tesla private at $420 per share.
After The Wall Street Journal asked Musk if his more recent tweet about Tesla’s share price was a joke or was vetted, Musk said, “No.” The SEC declined to comment on the tweet, and whether it meant that Musk had violated their agreement.
Tesla reopened its Fremont plant the weekend of May 9, in defiance of local health orders with no consequences.