The Business Times

Can anyone on Tesla's board tame Elon Musk?

Published Sun, Oct 7, 2018 · 09:50 PM

Southfield, Michigan

THE silence of Tesla's board over the past two days after Elon Musk went on another Twitter tirade raises fresh questions about who has what it takes to oversee the unpredictable CEO.

Mr Musk must relinquish his chairman role under a settlement tied to his tweeting with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which left open the possibility that the carmaker could appoint an existing independent director.

On Thursday, the billionaire lashed out against the agency, calling it "Shortsellers Enrichment Commission". The board, which vouched for its CEO's integrity and leadership hours after the SEC sued on Sept 27, has been mum since.

"What Tesla needs is for the board to assert its independence and to really put a check on Elon to rein in the communications," said James Albertine, an analyst at Consumer Edge Research. He downgraded the stock to the equivalent of a hold on Aug 21, in part citing Mr Musk's inability to maintain his composure.

Tesla didn't immediately reply to requests seeking comment.

The board's passivity after Mr Musk's latest tweet storm - following its earlier support after the explosive tweet in August that got him in trouble with the SEC - has heightened the scrutiny of its members' time spent and ability to supervise him.

Who is independent on the board? According to Tesla, seven of its nine directors are. Only Mr Musk and his brother Kimbal, are classified as not independent.

The two major US proxy advisory firms disagree. Lead independent director Antonio Gracias, a private equity firm founder, isn't independent, according to Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis.

A Tesla director since 2007, Mr Gracias founded Valor Equity Partners and participated along with the firm in funding rounds and a debt raise that Tesla conducted before its 2010 initial public offering. He's also backed Musk ventures PayPal Holdings, SolarCity and Space Exploration Technologies. Mr Musk gifted him the second Roadster sports car that Tesla ever built.

Brad Buss, who served as a SolarCity chief financial officer before Tesla acquired the company in 2016, doesn't meet the criteria of independence from the two proxy advisers either.

Steve Jurvetson, who co-founded the venture capital firm DFJ, has been on leave from Tesla's board for almost a year. While accusations of misconduct led to his resignation from DFJ, Tesla hasn't addressed whether he'll return as a director. Both Jurvetson and Ira Ehrenpreis, a venture capitalist, are also investors in Mr Musk's rocket company SpaceX.

That leaves directors whose independence wouldn't be subject to criticism - and could in theory qualify to become chairmen. They are Robyn Denholm, the chief financial officer of Telstra, Australia's largest telecommunications company; Linda Johnson Rice, who leads the eponymous publishing company known for Ebony magazine; and James Murdoch, the CEO of Twenty-First Century Fox.

Mr Denholm, who's been a director since 2014, ruled herself out of the running for becoming Tesla's chairman through a Telstra spokesperson, The Age newspaper reported on Monday.

The New York Times reported on Tuesday that some directors have proposed Mr Murdoch could be chairman, citing unidentified people involved in the board's deliberations. But the newspaper said Mr Murdoch hadn't discussed it with any of other members, and cited another person saying the board hadn't started serious discussions of the matter.

Both Mr Murdoch and Ms Rice are media moguls who lack experience running automotive or manufacturing companies. That's the sort of skill set Mr Musk needs to take Tesla forward, said Mr Albertine, the Consumer Edge Research analyst.

"He's very clearly emotionally and psychologically drained at this point," Mr Albertine said of Mr Musk. "This is a company now that's at a point where it needs a better operator." BLOOMBERG

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