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5 Major Takeaways From Tesla’s $1 Trillion Pay Package for Elon Musk

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  • Tesla just proposed a new pay package worth up to $1 trillion for CEO Elon Musk.
  • To earn it, Musk needs to hit milestones like turning Tesla into the most valuable company ever and selling one million robots.
  • Here are some key takeaways from the unprecedented proposed new pay package.

Tesla has unveiled a new pay package for Elon Musk that could turn the world’s richest man into the first trillionaire.

The EV giant announced on Friday that it would submit the enormous new compensation plan, which requires the Tesla CEO to boost the company’s valuation to $8.5 trillion, for shareholder approval in November.

The proposed pay package is unprecedented in both its size and the scale at which Tesla will have to grow for Musk to achieve it.

Here are five takeaways from what could end up being one of the largest pay packages in corporate history.

Musk needs to double Tesla’s valuation to unlock the first tranche of shares


Elon Musk Tesla



Tesla CEO Elon Musk will need to double the company’s valuation, and that’s only the beginning.


Getty Images

The structure of the eye-watering pay package means Musk needs to grow Tesla’s business at an unprecedented rate.

To unlock just the first portion of shares, the billionaire would need to nearly double Tesla’s valuation to $2 trillion. The final tranches of shares would not vest until the EV giant’s valuation has hit $8.5 trillion, double the market cap of Nvidia, the most valuable company ever.

The full pay package is also contingent on Tesla meeting 12 “operational milestones.”

Those include selling about 12 million cars and one million Optimus robots over the next decade, putting a million robotaxis on the road, and boosting adjusted earnings from $16.6 billion in 2024 to a staggering $400 billion.

That’s way above tech giants like Microsoft and Apple, which reported adjusted earnings of around $162.7 billion and $134.66 billion, respectively, in their most recent full financial year results.

It requires Musk to help with succession planning




It’s unclear who would step into Musk’s shoes as Tesla’s CEO if he were to leave.


Apu Gomes/Getty Images

The massive compensation package is structured so that it pays out tranches of shares over a 10-year period, as Musk hits specific goals.

One of the final objectives needed to unlock the full payout is for Musk to set up a “CEO succession framework,” according to Tesla’s SEC filing.

In May, Musk said he would be Tesla’s CEO in five years’ time “unless I die.” But questions over who would take over Tesla if Musk were to step down have been swirling for years. If the billionaire wants to earn his full $1 trillion payout, he’d need to finally answer them.

Tesla’s board says the pay package may still not be enough to keep Musk




A slightly more youthful Elon Musk at a Tesla launch.


Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

In the “considerations and risks” section of Tesla’s SEC filing, the company’s board warned shareholders that if they don’t approve the deal, Musk might leave Tesla for good.

Musk has previously hinted that he could reduce the amount of time he spends working on Tesla if he doesn’t gain more voting control. The company said Musk could leave if Tesla fails to “adequately retain and incentivize him.”

On the other hand, Tesla’s SEC filing says that there is still a chance the $1 trillion pay package “may not be sufficient” to keep Musk at the company.

Tesla’s risk assessment pointed to the package’s contingent nature and the risk of legal challenges like the one that derailed Musk’s previous pay deal.

Musk would get more voting control




The pay package could boost Musk’s voting stake over Tesla to nearly 29%.


Suzanne Cordeiro/Getty Images

The proposed pay package aims to address Musk’s long-running frustrations with the amount of voting control he has at Tesla.

If he meets the compensation plan’s targets, the billionaire’s Tesla stake would rise from 13% to at least 25%. That’s the level of control at which Musk said in January he would feel comfortable expanding Tesla’s AI and robotics initiatives.

Depending on what happens with Musk’s previous pay package, which is trapped in legal limbo, the Tesla CEO’s voting stake could eventually hit nearly 29%.

Tesla’s board says Musk’s situation is unlike any other CEO




Tesla cofounder and CEO Elon Musk at the Cybertruck launch in 2019.


FREDERIC J. BROWN / Getty

Musk’s 2018 compensation package, which was struck down by a Delaware judge last year, was already unprecedented in the history of executive pay — and that $46.8 billion payout is dwarfed by the Tesla CEO’s new compensation plan.

In its SEC filing, Tesla’s board said it was “irrelevant” to benchmark Musk’s pay against the pay packages enjoyed by other CEOs, as no other chief executive faced such challenging and complex performance targets.

Instead, the board said a “special committee” had based Musk’s new pay on his previous compensation plan after concluding that he was best motivated by “a pay-for-performance compensation framework with ambitious goals that no one else has achieved before.”

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