Current:Home > NewsPoinbank:Elon Musk takes the witness stand to defend his Tesla buyout tweets -WealthMindset
Poinbank:Elon Musk takes the witness stand to defend his Tesla buyout tweets
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-11 09:59:17
SAN FRANCISCO — Elon Musk took the witness stand Friday to defend a 2018 tweet claiming he had lined up the financing to take Tesla private in a deal that never came close to happening.
The Poinbanktweet resulted in a $40 million settlement with securities regulators. It also led to a class-action lawsuit alleging he misled investors, pulling him into court for about a half hour Friday to deliver sworn testimony in front of a nine-person jury and a full room of media and other spectators.
The trial was then adjourned for the weekend and Musk was told to return Monday to answer more questions.
In his initial appearance on the stand, Musk defended his prolific tweeting as "the most democratic way" to distribute information even while acknowledging constraints of Twitter's 280-character limit can make it difficult to make everything as clear as possible.
"I think you can absolutely be truthful (on Twitter)," Musk asserted on the stand. "But can you be comprehensive? Of course not."
Musk's latest headache stems from the inherent brevity on Twitter, a service that he has been running since completing his $44 billion purchase of it in October.
The trial hinges on the question of whether a pair of tweets that Musk posted on Aug. 7, 2018, damaged Tesla shareholders during a 10-day period leading up to a Musk admission that the buyout he had envisioned wasn't going to happen.
In the first of those those two 2018 tweets, Musk stated "funding secured" for a what would have been a $72 billion buyout of Tesla at a time when the electric automaker was still grappling with production problems and was worth far less than it is now. Musk followed up a few hours later with another tweet suggesting a deal was imminent.
After it became apparent that the money wasn't in place to take Tesla private, Musk stepped down as Tesla's chairman while remaining CEO as part of the Securities and Exchange Commission settlement, without acknowledging any wrongdoing.
The impulsive billionaire came into court wearing a dark suit and tie on the third day of the civil trial in San Francisco that his lawyer unsuccessfully tried to move to Texas, where Tesla is now headquartered, on the premise that media coverage of his tumultuous takeover of Twitter had tainted the jury pool.
The jury that was assembled earlier this week focused intently on Musk while he answered questions posed by Nicholas Porritt, a lawyer representing Tesla shareholders. At one point, Musk asked Porritt if he would speak closer to the microphone so he could hear him better. At other times, Musk craned his neck as he gazed around the courtroom.
Musk, 51, said he cares "a great deal" about investors and also railed against short sellers who make investments that reward them when a company's stock price falls. He called short selling an "evil" practice that should be outlawed, denigrating those who profit from it as "a bunch of sharks."
When shown communications from Tesla investors urging him to curtail or completely stop his Twitter habit before the 2018 buyout tweet, Musk said he couldn't remember all those interactions from years ago, especially since he gets a "Niagara Falls" of emails.
Even before Musk took the stand, U.S. District Judge Edward Chen had declared that the jurors can consider those two tweets to be false, leaving them to decide whether Musk deliberately deceived investors and whether his statements saddled them with losses.
Musk has previously contended he entered into the SEC settlement under duress and maintained he believed he had locked up financial backing for a Tesla buyout during meetings with representatives from Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund.
An expert on corporate buyouts hired by shareholder lawyers to study the events surrounding Musk's proposal to take Tesla private spent the bulk of his three hours on the stand Friday deriding the plan as an ill-conceived concept.
"This proposal was an extreme outlier," said Guhan Subramanian, a Harvard University business and law professor for more than 20 years. "It was incoherent. It was illusory."
In a lengthy cross examination that delayed Musk's appearance, a lawyer for Tesla's board of directors tried to undermine Subramanian's testimony by pointing out that it relied on graduate student assistance to review some of the material related to the August 2018 tweets. The lawyer, William Price, also noted Subramanian's $1,900-per-hour fee for compiling his report for the case.
The trial over his Tesla tweets come at a time when Musk has been focusing on Twitter while also serving as the automaker's CEO and also remaining deeply involved in SpaceX, the rocket ship company he founded.
Musk's leadership of Twitter — where he has gutted the staff and alienated users and advertisers — has proven unpopular among Tesla's current stockholders, who are worried he has been devoting less time steering the automaker at a time of intensifying competition. Those concerns contributed to a 65% decline in Tesla's stock last year that wiped out more than $700 billion in shareholder wealth — far more than the $14 billion swing in fortune that occurred between the company's high and low stock prices during the Aug. 7-17, 2018 period covered in the class-action lawsuit.
Tesla's stock has split twice since then, making the $420 buyout price cited in his 2018 tweet worth $28 on adjusted basis now. The company's shares were trading around $133.42 Friday, down from the company's November 2021 split-adjusted peak of $414.50.
After Musk dropped the idea of a Tesla buyout, the company overcame its production problems, resulting in a rapid upturn in car sales that caused its stock to soar and minted Musk as the world's richest person until he bought Twitter. Musk dropped from the top spot on the wealth list after the stock market's backlash to his handling of Twitter.
When asked Friday about the challenges that Tesla faced in 2018, he recalled spending many nights sleeping at the automaker's California factory as he tried to keep the company afloat.
"The sheer level of pain to make Tesla successful during that 2017, 2018 period was excruciating," he recalled.
veryGood! (75856)
Related
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- The Taylor Swift economy must be protected at all costs
- Shop the Best Bags from Loungefly’s Holiday Collection That Feature Your Favorite Character
- Kourtney Kardashian Subtly Hints She Welcomed Baby Boy With Travis Barker
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- A woman killed in Belgium decades ago has been identified when a relative saw her distinctive tattoo
- “Shocked” Travis Kelce Reacts to Taylor Swift’s Concert Shoutout
- GM autoworkers keep voting 'no' on record contract, imperiling deal
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Israeli forces raid Gaza’s largest hospital, where hundreds of patients are stranded by fighting
Ranking
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- A suspect in the 1994 Rwanda genocide goes on trial in Paris after a decadeslong investigation
- Man charged with abducting Michigan teen who was strangled dies while awaiting trial
- 11 ex-police officers sentenced in 2021 killings of 17 migrants and 2 others in northern Mexico
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Who is Yoshinobu Yamamoto, the Japanese pitching ace bound for MLB next season?
- How Shaun White is Emulating Yes Man in His Retirement
- German government grants Siemens Energy a loan guarantee to help secure the company
Recommendation
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Spain leader defends amnesty deal for Catalan in parliament ahead of vote to form new government
Biden announces 5 federal judicial nominees and stresses their varied professional backgrounds
Greta Thunberg attends a London court hearing after police charged her with a public order offense
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
A suspect in the 1994 Rwanda genocide goes on trial in Paris after a decadeslong investigation
Mother of 6-year-old boy who shot teacher faces sentencing for marijuana use while owning a gun
EU moves closer to imposing a new set of sanctions on Russia for its war on Ukraine