Interview of Musk zaps stock

Igor Antarov, managing partner of the Moscow Tesla Club, charg- es a Model 3 last month in Moscow. Tesla stocks tumbled about 9 percent Friday after CEO Elon Musk said in a newspaper inter- view that stress may be getting the better of him.
Igor Antarov, managing partner of the Moscow Tesla Club, charg- es a Model 3 last month in Moscow. Tesla stocks tumbled about 9 percent Friday after CEO Elon Musk said in a newspaper inter- view that stress may be getting the better of him.

Tesla Inc. shares plunged Friday, capping the company's worst week since 2016, after Elon Musk told The New York Times that no one saw or reviewed his tweet about the plan to take the company private before he posted it.

Musk, Tesla's chief executive officer and chairman, told the Times that he typed the take-private tweet as he drove himself to the airport on Aug. 7. The tweet said: "Am considering taking Tesla private at $420. Funding secured." The billionaire frequently teared up in an interview and discussed the personal strain of leading the electric-car maker, the newspaper said.

The stock was nowhere near that price Friday as it tumbled 8.9 percent, the most in two years, to close at $305.50. The fourth straight day of declines has wiped out Tesla's year-to-date gains and pushed the shares down 14 percent this week -- their worst showing since February 2016.

In an hourlong interview with the newspaper, Musk also detailed his frequent use of the sleep-aid Ambien -- a drug he's discussed using before, and whose well-known side effects include sleepwalking. "It is often a choice of no sleep or Ambien," he told the newspaper.

Rather than put him to sleep, the drug has sometimes led Musk to spend his nights on Twitter, worrying some board members, the newspaper said, citing a person familiar with the board's thinking.

The going-private tweet has set off a furor, causing the stock to jump but also prompting mounting scrutiny, including a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation.

Almost a week later, the CEO said the basis for that statement were conversations with Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, which first expressed interest in helping take the company private in early 2017. Tesla's board has since clarified that it hasn't received a formal proposal from Musk, nor has it concluded whether going private would be advisable or feasible. This week, Musk was said to have received a subpoena for more information, according to a person familiar with the matter.

One funding possibility being considered for the potential privatization is for Musk's rocket company SpaceX to help bankroll the deal and take a stake in Tesla, the Times said, citing people familiar with the matter.

Efforts are also underway to recruit an executive to take some pressure off Musk, the newspaper said, citing people briefed on the search. A couple of years ago, Tesla approached Facebook Inc. executive Sheryl Sandberg about the job, Musk told the newspaper, but added that no active search is taking place currently "to the best of my knowledge."

"If you have anyone who can do a better job, please let me know," Musk told the Times. "They can have the job."

Despite the frenzy over Tesla's future, production of the pivotal Model 3 sedan -- which has frequently kept Musk at the Fremont, Calif., factory overnight -- is defying the odds and going well, according to Evercore ISI analysts. Output is well on track for weekly production goals, and set for a significant boost, the analysts wrote Thursday after touring the plant. Bloomberg's Model 3 Tracker also shows significant improvement this month.

Musk told the newspaper that he didn't recall communications from the board at all and that he "definitely did not get calls from irate directors." He later amended the comment through a spokesman, saying lead independent Director Antonio Gracias had contacted him about the Aug. 7 tweet. Musk agreed not to tweet again on the possible privatization without discussing it with the board, the spokesman said.

Information for this article was contributed by Karen Lin of Bloomberg News.

Business on 08/18/2018

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