Tesla has appointed Robyn Denholm as the new chair of its board of directors.
Denholm replaces Elon Musk, who was forced to step down and pay a $20 million (£15.3m) penalty as part of a settlement with the American Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over a charge of securities fraud. Musk remains as CEO of the electric car manufacturer, which was also required pay a penalty of $20m.
Denholm, until now chief financial officer of Australian telecoms company Telstra, will begin her new role immediately and serve on a full-time basis once her six-month notice period expires. Having been a member of the board as an independent director since 2014, Denholm will now temporarily step down as chair of Tesla's audit committee until she leaves Telstra.
Analysis: will the Tesla fairytale end this year?
Musk was forced to leave his position after the SEC charged him with fraud in response to his tweet in August suggesting he could take Tesla private at $420 a share, a substantial premium at the time, and had secured funding to do so. The SEC claimed that Musk knew the funding was not secured.
The tweet caused Tesla’s stock price to jump and, according to the SEC, “led to significant market disruption.” The SEC also said that Tesla had not put any procedures in place to determine that Musk’s tweets about the company were accurate or complete.
Musk initially said the SEC’s charges were “unjustified”, but has now reached an agreement with the body to settle the charges. Under the deal, Musk will be ineligible to be re-elected as company chairman for three years.
Tesla has also agreed to appoint two new independent directors to its board, establish a new committee of independent directors and put in place additional controls over Musk’s communications.
By settling, Musk neither admitted or denied misleading investors.
Numerous reports suggested Musk and Tesla had declined to settle the case when the SEC initially brought the charges, and there has been no comment from either on the deal at time of writing. As CEO, Musk will essentially remain in day-to-day charge of the firm, but he will likely face more oversight and control from the board and the new chairman. As Tesla's largest shareholder, Musk is likely to retain a seat on the board, and have influence in determining his successor as chair.
By allowing Musk to stay on as CEO under the settlement, the SEC has avoided the possibility that removing Musk from Tesla could cause investors to lose faith in the company's ability to thrive without him, potentially leading to more instability in its share price and value.
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Strange how all these exact
Strange how all these exact same negative comments were said 5 years ago when Tesla was doomed to die and taken over by legacy automakers...sorry but Tesla is currently eating their lunch and in another five years their wallet...the future is electric and Tesla the most dominant player in it.
FRI2 wrote:
These people just regurgitate the (predominantly negative) false or deliberately misleading Tesla articles which make up the news headlines these days, rather than thinking for themselves or doing a bit of basic research. It will continue for years.
I still predict Tesla will take over a major manufacturer in a few years, such as Ford or GM. Depends on who is the slowest to adapt to the radically changing industry.
WTF?
WTF?
Tesla is ahead of BMW now in valuation...
https://electrek.co/2018/11/08/tesla-tsla-surpasses-bmw-valuation/
Just a Puppet...?
Can’t honestly think that Musk won’t have a sway even if he’s not the Head over the top of the metaphorical Trench.