Musk’s $75.7b Tesla pay deal opposed by Norway sovereign wealth fund 

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 Elon Musk, CEO of SpaceX and Tesla and owner of X, formerly known as Twitter.

The vote at next week’s annual general meeting will be the second time Mr Elon Musk’s pay package has been put before shareholders.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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OSLO – Norway’s US$1.7 trillion ($2.3 trillion) sovereign wealth fund said it would vote against the

US$56 billion pay package for Tesla chief executive Elon Musk,

adding to opposition for the carmaker ahead of its annual general meeting next week.

“We remain concerned about the total size of the award, the structure given performance triggers, dilution, and lack of mitigation of key person risk,” Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM) – the official name of the fund – said in a statement on June 8. 

The vote at next week’s annual general meeting will be the second time Mr Musk’s pay package has been put before shareholders.

A judge voided an initial vote that approved the package in 2018. Proxy advisers Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis & Co have recommended investors reject the proposal.

NBIM also voted against the pay package in 2018, though about three-quarters of investors backed it at the time. A Delaware judge voided the deal earlier in 2024, saying investors were not fully informed of key details.

The decision is “consistent with our vote on the same award in 2018”, the Norwegian fund said, adding it will “continue to seek constructive dialogue with Tesla on this and other topics”. 

The outcome of the shareholder vote is only advisory, though a loss would be a major embarrassment to Tesla’s board and to its top executive.

Mr Musk has also threatened to build products outside of Tesla if he cannot increase his equity holdings in the company, something the pay deal would allow him to do.

While NBIM said it would vote in favour of a management proposal to move the company’s corporate home to Texas from Delaware, it plans to back a shareholder proposal calling on Tesla to adopt new policies related to collective bargaining and freedom of association.

The latter proposal, a response to an almost seven-month long strike by Swedish Tesla technicians, is being supported by several of the Nordic region’s biggest asset owners.

Tesla has urged shareholders to vote against it, saying “the company is already committed to protecting its employees’ rights”.

NBIM owned a 0.98 per cent holding worth US$7.72 billion in Tesla as at the end of 2023, according to its website. It issues its voting intentions five days before the AGMs of the companies it invests in. BLOOMBERG

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