🔒 Fresh Twitter row: SEC accuses Elon Musk of contempt of court – The Wall Street Journal

EDINBURGH — South Africa-born technology entrepreneur Elon Musk, who cofounded PayPal and is the mastermind behind Tesla, has built wealth and power through his businesses – but he is not so powerful that he is out-of-reach of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which this week pushed for Musk to be charged with contempt of court. Musk has been playing a game with the SEC for some time via Twitter, apparently because he hates short-sellers in Tesla. Musk has called the SEC the Shortseller Enrichment Commission in a Tweet. The dual started in August when Musk Tweeted that he had secured funding to take publicly listed Tesla private, but there was no deal. The Tweet rocked the stock price and the SEC accused Musk of securities fraud. Musk and Tesla were ordered to pay $20m. An unrepentant Musk stepped down as the company’s chairman and was under strict instructions to divert his Tweets through a lawyer. Now Musk has taunted the SEC with a Tweet making a production forecast. – Jackie Cameron

SEC Asks Manhattan Federal Court to Hold Elon Musk in Contempt

By Dave Michaels and  Tim Higgins

(The Wall Street Journal) – The Securities and Exchange Commission asked a federal judge on Monday to hold Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk in contempt of court over tweets he made last week discussing the auto maker’s 2019 projected production volumes.
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In a court filing, the SEC said Mr. Musk violated a condition of his settlement with the regulator last year, when he was accused of tweeting misleading information about taking Tesla private. Mr. Musk’s deal with the SEC required that Tesla officials pre-approve any statements from Mr. Musk that could affect the company’s stock price.

A Tesla spokesman and Mr. Musk didn’t respond to requests for comment. Tesla shares, which gained 1.4% in regular trading Monday, were off 4% after hours following the SEC filing.

In a series of Twitter messages on Feb. 19 that began as a celebration over Tesla vehicles prepared for shipment to Europe, Mr. Musk noted how the auto maker had achieved strong growth in recent years. “Tesla made 0 cars in 2011, but will make around 500k in 2019,” he wrote in a tweet after regular trading hours.

Read also: An annus horribilis for Elon Musk as he cuts staff at Tesla, but he drills on

The suggestion that Tesla would make 500,000 vehicles this year stood in contrast to guidance given by the company on Jan. 30. In his quarterly shareholder letter, Mr. Musk told investors that Tesla would reach an annualised build rate of 500,000 Model 3s sometime between the fourth quarter of this year and the second quarter of next year. Mr. Musk said in Tesla’s shareholder letter that the company planned to deliver as many as 400,000 in all of 2019.

Hours after his initial tweets, Mr. Musk clarified in another message, writing, “Meant to say annualised production rate at end of 2019 probably around 500k, ie 10k cars/week. Deliveries for year still estimated to be about 400k.”

The SEC said that Mr. Musk “did not seek or receive pre-approval prior to publishing this tweet, which was inaccurate and disseminated to over 24 million people.”

In its response to the SEC, Tesla stated the content of Mr. Musk’s tweet had previously been pre-approved for a Jan. 30 release by the company’s general counsel and designated securities counsel.

“Although the 7:15 PM EST tweet was not individually pre-approved, Mr. Musk believed that the substance had already been appropriately vetted, pre-approved, and publicly disseminated,” wrote Bradley Bondi, outside counsel working for Tesla, in a letter dated Feb. 22 and included in the material filed with the court by the SEC and released Monday. “Moreover, the tweet was made outside of NASDAQ trading hours.”

Read also: Elon Musk fights tears as Tesla tweet takes ‘excruciating’ personal toll – New York Times

Tesla’s designated securities lawyer monitors Mr. Musk’s Twitter account and saw the Feb. 19 tweet, according to Mr. Bondi. The designated securities lawyer and Mr. Musk huddled at the auto maker’s factory and drafted a tweet to clarify the original one, Mr. Bondi wrote.

Later on Monday, Mr. Musk took to Twitter to point out what he said on the Jan. 30 quarterly call, in response to a user who noted his comments from the call that suggested Model 3 deliveries could range between 350,000 and 500,000 this year.

“SEC forgot to read Tesla earnings transcript, which clearly states 350k to 500k,” Mr. Musk tweeted on Monday. “How embarassing…,” he wrote, concluding with the “hugging face” emoji. He followed with another tweet: “I have great respect for judges. It’s not perfect, but, in general, we should be very glad of the US justice system.”

The likely next step is a court hearing where a judge will consider whether Mr. Musk’s tweet violated the terms of his earlier settlement and, if so, what kind of punishment is necessary to get him to comply, said Brad Bennett, a former enforcement director at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

An SEC spokeswoman declined to comment on what additional punishment Mr. Musk could face.

A judge is unlikely to order the most extreme punishment – barring Mr. Musk from being an officer of a public company – because Mr. Musk corrected his first tweet, Mr. Bennett said. But a judge could order further limitations on Mr. Musk’s activities or any other kind of remedy “that they believe are necessary to get him to comply with the settlement,” Mr. Bennett said.

The SEC began scrutinising Mr. Musk’s use of Twitter after he surprised investors on Aug. 7 with tweets that stated he was thinking about taking the auto maker private, and had secured funding. Tesla’s shares immediately soared but fell in later days when The Wall Street Journal and others reported that Mr. Musk and his advisers were still trying to line up potential investors and buyers.

The SEC accused Mr. Musk of misleading investors and sought to bar him from serving as an officer or director of publicly traded companies. While Mr. Musk had denied wrong-doing, he settled with the SEC in September in a deal that allowed him to stay as CEO but had him give up his role as chairman. Mr. Musk and Tesla also each agreed to pay a fine of $20m.

Tesla agreed to appoint two new outside directors and greater oversight of Mr. Musk’s communications that could be seen as material. The episode had become an enormous distraction at a time when Tesla was under intense pressure to consistently build Model 3 sedans and achieve Mr. Musk’s aim of making more-affordable electric vehicles and evolving from a niche luxury-car company.

Following the settlement, Mr. Musk seemed to mock the SEC, including in an October tweet that dubbed the agency the “Shortseller Enrichment Commission.” In December, he went even further, saying in a high-profile CBS interview that he didn’t respect the SEC.

During the interview, Mr. Musk said that since the settlement, none of his tweets had been censored – and no one was reading them before they went out.

“The only tweets that would have to be, say, reviewed would be if a tweet had a probability of causing a movement in the stock,” he said. “Otherwise, it’s ‘Hello, First Amendment’ – like, freedom of speech is fundamental.”

The day after the Feb. 19 tweets, Tesla named a new general counsel to replace Dane Butswinkas, who was departing after just two months on the job. His departure was in the works prior to Mr. Musk’s tweet, according to people familiar with the situation.

Tesla’s new top lawyer is Jonathan Chang, a company insider who had handled securities issues among other corporate matters.

Mr. Musk’s Twitter usage outpaces most tech executives, with an unusually large proportion being replies to other tweets. He often shares life views, rebuts critics and teases business ideas – while sometimes causing controversy.

Weeks before the August “funding secured” tweets, Mr. Musk suggested on Twitter that one of the cave explorers who helped rescue a boys soccer team in Thailand was a pedophile, a claim that has led to a defamation lawsuit. Mr. Musk asked a US judge to dismiss the lawsuit, saying his comments were protected as free speech under US law.

Write to Dave Michaels at [email protected] and Tim Higgins at [email protected]

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