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Tesla moves to stymie shareholder lawsuits after Musk pay saga

Tesla moves to stymie shareholder lawsuits after Musk pay saga

Business Times18-05-2025

[NEW YORK] Tesla took a step to prevent future shareholder lawsuits like the one that blocked a record-setting pay package for chief executive Elon Musk.
The automaker late on Friday (May 16) disclosed changes to its corporate bylaws that will require investors to own at least 3 per cent of the company's shares in order to 'institute or maintain a derivative proceeding'. The move was taken on Thursday, according to a regulatory filing.
The change comes days after Texas governor Greg Abbott signed legislation enacting a series of changes to the state's corporate law, including allowing companies to adopt ownership thresholds that must be met for shareholder derivative claims. Abbott and other Republican leaders in the state have touted the measure as a method for enticing more businesses to incorporate in the state.
Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Musk shifted Tesla's incorporation to Texas last year after a judge in Delaware struck down a 'moonshot' package of stock options for Musk.
The compensation agreement, approved by shareholders in 2018, was initially worth US$2.6 billion and spiked to US$56 billion by the time it was voided in early 2024. Plunging and soaring with the company's fortunes, it has been valued in excess of US$100 billion when the shares have climbed.
The package was challenged by a shareholder who argued that Tesla's directors didn't make proper disclosures about the terms and performance benchmarks required. Delaware Chancery Court chief judge Kathaleen St J McCormick agreed, finding that Musk had undue influence over the process and that Tesla's board, which includes longtime friends and associates, was rife with conflicts of interest.
Tesla has appealed that decision to the Delaware Supreme Court, a process that could still take months. Shareholders voted last year to re-ratify the prior package, part of a symbolic effort to bolster Musk's legal case.
Tesla disclosed in a regulatory filing last month that the board had established a special committee to consider compensation matters involving the CEO. BLOOMBERG

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While the Rosenfields own 85 per cent of the business, Mr Voutilainen and some family and friends own the remaining 15 per cent. Together, the co-CEOs vowed to return Urban Jurgensen to its former glory but with a modern twist. 'Our goal is to take our Danish spirit and to create a brand that feels joyful and welcoming. The watches were designed by Kari to be appealing to both men and women,' says the elder Mr Rosenfield. 'He designed a new case and lug shape for the watches that make them sit very comfortably on a smaller wrist.' The round cases are 39mm and 39.5mm in diameter and boast either shortened lugs or reinterpreted teardrop-designed lugs to fit nicely on the wrist. The new Urban Jurgensen watches are made in Switzerland. They are powered by in-house movements designed by Mr Voutilainen and made in the Urban Jurgensen workshops in Biel. Two of the three watches are based on a pre-existing Voutilainen calibre that has been adapted. It features a free-spring balance wheel with direct double-wheel escapement. Each is crafted in limited numbers. The UJ-1 watch, for instance, is built in a limited edition of just 75 pieces. Also referred to as the 250th Anniversary watch, it boasts a 39.5mm case and houses a complex gold movement with tourbillon remontoir escapement, which compensates for errors in timekeeping due to the effects of gravity and brings constant force for precision. The watch was inspired by the Pratt Oval, with details such as hand-guilloche finishes, an asymmetric minute track and a gold subsidiary dial. Retailing for 368,000 Swiss francs (S$581,000), it is crafted in either rose gold or platinum and features a hand-finished dial in silver or grey. Three combinations will be offered in runs of 25 of each. The plan is to create just 75 each of the other two watches as well. The UJ-2 watch (105,000 francs) is an elegant time-only watch. Created in cooperation with another top independent watchmaker, Mr Andreas Strehler, the UJ-3 is a perpetual calendar with an instantaneous jump mechanism at midnight that keeps the moon phase accurate to within one day every 14,000 years. It retails for 168,000 francs. The brand expects to make fewer than 100 watches in its first year, then double that in the next. Unlike Mr Voutilainen's namesake brand, which makes about 60 watches a year, Mr Rosenfield says Urban Jurgensen will aim to steadily grow over the course of years, focusing on developing new complications. Currently, the watches are available only directly to consumers online. 'This collection is a tribute to Urban Jurgensen and his unique and extraordinary legacy. It's rooted in everything that defines who we are: precision, artistry and a profound respect for the value of time,' says Mr Voutilainen. 'We want to keep the brand rare, and while we want to grow it, we can't grow too fast. We want to keep building the most sophisticated movements and create watches with a soul.' Bloomberg Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

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