Tesla Chair Robyn Denholm says firm believes in ‘huge dangers for the possibility of massive rewards’.
Tesla has requested shareholders to reapprove a record-breaking $56bn pay bundle for CEO Elon Musk after a US choose rejected the deal.
In a submitting with the Securities and Change Fee on Wednesday, Tesla Chair Robyn Denholm stated the board of administrators supported the unique pay deal and believed in “huge dangers for the possibility of massive rewards”.
“Elon has not been paid for any of his work for Tesla for the previous six years that has helped to generate vital progress and stockholder worth,” Denholm wrote.
“That strikes us – and the various stockholders from whom we have already got heard – as essentially unfair, and inconsistent with the desire of the stockholders who voted for it.”
Shareholders, who will collect for his or her annual assembly on June 13, may also be requested to approve a proposal to maneuver the corporate’s company house to Texas.
The proposals come on the heels of a troublesome interval for the electrical carmaker.
Tesla’s automobile deliveries fell by 8.5 p.c within the first quarter, and the corporate’s shares have fallen 37 p.c to date this 12 months even because the S&P 500 has risen about 6 p.c.
Musk earlier this week instructed employees in a memo that the corporate would lay off greater than 10 p.c of its international workforce to be “lean, progressive and hungry for the subsequent progress section cycle”.
Choose Kathaleen McCormick of Delaware’s Court docket of Chancery rejected Musk’s compensation bundle in January, discovering that the South Africa-born entrepreneur had closely influenced the deal and granting him such “an unfathomable sum” can be unfair to shareholders.
Shares of Tesla fell about 1 p.c on Wednesday following the information of the proposed pay bundle.