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Tesla Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA) is about to rubber-stamp one of the most extravagant CEO pay packages in corporate history — a $1 trillion, 10-year deal for Elon Musk — even as its valuation stretches further from reality.
Musk’s compensation includes $31 billion in restricted stock and could soar past $113 billion in total. It also comes at a time when the car company’s market share is shrinking.
That’d be bad enough if it weren’t just a car company trying to be something else. Its Optimus robot projects, for example, are stalling. And those long-promised robotaxis? They remain years behind rivals like Alphabet Inc‘s (NASDAQ:GOOG) Waymo, Uber Technologies Inc (NYSE:UBER) and Amazon.com Inc.‘s (NASDAQ:AMZN) subsidiary Zoox.
Indeed, the chorus of boos is loud ahead of the company’s third-quarter earnings, which are to be announced on Wednesday. Still, Musk has plenty of like-minded business people cheering on his wild salary bump.
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International Shareholder Services (ISS) opposes Musk’s pay package, citing “unmitigated concerns surrounding the special award’s magnitude and design.”
If approved, the plan would become the most extensive CEO compensation package ever granted by a public company. It could potentially increase Musk’s stake in Tesla by 12% if the automaker reaches a market capitalization of $8.5 trillion in 10 years.
But here’s the thing: Under Musk, Tesla experienced a decline in its global market share, which has dropped from about 23% to 18% over the past year. Its market capitalization remains strong at $1.4 trillion, though its stock price has faced significant volatility.
ARK Invests‘ CEO Cathie Wood isn’t worried. She even criticized the ISS’s recommendation to vote against the pay package.
“Isn’t it sad, if not damning, that institutional shareholders rely on proxy firms to tell them how they should vote? Index funds do no fundamental research, yet dominate institutional voting,” Wood said, calling index-based investing a “form of socialism.”
The automaker’s $8 trillion market cap dream hinges on a narrative that Tesla is no longer just a car company but a futuristic AI powerhouse.
“After a brutal few quarters we are finally starting to see stable demand trends for Tesla,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives recently wrote. “The Tesla story going forward is around the AI transformation being led by the autonomous and robotics initiatives.”