• =?UTF-8?Q?Elon_kupi_96_milion=C3=B3w_akcji_Tesli_po_23,34_=24,_c?= =?UTF-8?Q?zyli_13_razy_taniej,_co_zbankrutuje_Tesl=C4=99?=

    From International Court of Internet Justice@user5066@newsgrouper.org.invalid to pl.misc.samochody,pl.sci.inzynieria,soc.culture.polish,pl.soc.polityka on Mon Aug 4 17:49:59 2025
    From Newsgroup: soc.culture.polish


    Bo wszyscy te++ b-Od-a chcieli kupi-c akcje tak tanio i kurs poleci na +eeb na szyj-O w d||+e.

    A za 2 lata kto+c nowy, zdolny, zast-api Elona, wyeksploatowanego w podr||++ach na
    Marsa, czy budowie HyperDoopera i kurs zacznie si-O powoli podnosi-c do 100$


    Tesla Board Approves $30 Billion Award For Elon Musk At 2018 Prices FacebookXLinkedInShare
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    KIT NORTON
    Updated 12:55 PM ET 08/04/2025

    Tesla's (TSLA) board approved an interim stock award of 96 million shares for CEO Elon Musk early Monday, calling it a "good faith" first step and setting the price per share for Musk to exercise his 2018 CEO award package. A longtime Tesla stock bull said the step could "remove" Tesla stock "overhang."

    The EV giant's board set a 23.34 purchase price for the 96 million shares in Musk's stock award program, according to regulatory filings. The current TSLA price is 1,200% higher than that level and the award is valued at $30 billion, based on Monday's stock price. Under terms of the award, Musk cannot "sell, transfer or dispose" of the TSLA shares covered by the 2025 interim CEO award for five years. The 96 million shares of restricted stock represent about 3% of TSLA stock outstanding and would give Musk, in total, about a 15% stake in the company.

    The Tesla board will put a larger compensation package before shareholders at the Nov. 6 annual meeting.

    In a letter to shareholders, the Tesla board said that this is an "important first step in compensating Elon Musk for his extraordinary work." The company said it continues to litigate Musk's shareholder-approved pay packages from 2018 and 2024 in the Delaware courts.

    Tesla stock rose about 2.2% to 309.40 during Monday's stock market, slightly off intraday highs of 312.12. Shares fell 4.25% last week to 302.63, retreating from key moving averages, but still in an actionable base.
    Retaining Musk And Removing Overhang

    Tesla wrote that it will not "double dip" and that if the Delaware court reinstates Musk's 2018 pay package, this award would be viewed as an interim and would be forfeited.

    "Retaining Elon is more important than ever before," the Tesla board wrote Monday. "Tesla is at a critical inflection point that has the potential to create continued extraordinary value for you, the shareholders."
    Best IBD 50 Stocks To Watch

    Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, a longtime Tesla bull, wrote Monday that the interim award will "keep Musk as CEO of Tesla at least until 2030 and removes an overhang on the stock."

    "While the groundwork is now in place for the next few years, it will be critical for the Tesla board of directors to get this long-term compensation strategy in place prior to the company's Nov. 6 shareholder meeting which would address the elephant in the room and remove a significant overhang on the stock," Ives said Monday.
    EV Giant Under Pressure

    On Friday, a federal jury in Miami, Fla., found the EV giant partly liable in the 2019 death of a pedestrian who was struck by a Tesla vehicle that was in Autopilot.

    A jury of eight people decided Friday that Tesla was partly at fault in the case, due to the use and marketing of its Autopilot technology. Tesla will have to pay a large portion of $329 million in punitive and compensatory damages, according to news reports.

    The $200 million in punitive damages were only assessed vs. Tesla, plaintiffs' attorneys told CNBC. They expect the EV maker to pay their clients $242.5 million, which includes one-third of the compensatory damages.

    Musk said on X Friday that Tesla will appeal the ruling.

    The lawsuit in Florida was over the 2019 death of Naibel Benavides Leon. The jury trial began on July 14 in Miami.

    The facts of the case are that George McGee was driving his Tesla Model S in April 2019 when the car crashed into a parked SUV at more than 50 miles per hour. Benavides Leon, who had been standing next to the vehicle, was killed and Dillon Angulo was injured. Before the crash, McGee had engaged the Autopilot system, which can steer, brake and accelerate the car on its own.

    Federal regulators have opened multiple investigations into Tesla's driver-assistance systems, including Autopilot and full self-driving, FSD.

    The verdict that Tesla was partially at fault in the 2019 crash comes as Musk and Tesla are looking to expand their robotaxi ride-hailing service across the U.S., touting the company's autonomous driving capabilities as the key to valuation for the EV giant.

    Musk on Sunday posted to X that Tesla vehicles "can drive themselves!"

    Piper Sandler analysts on Monday wrote that Tesla investors should not overreact to the Miami court ruling.

    "We've learned to ignore headlines related to Autopilot reliability. But the robotaxi roll-out has breathed new life into this topic, and we feel compelled to comment on recent media intrigue," the firm wrote.

    "This case does not have direct implications for Tesla's FSD rollout," Pipe Sandler analysts added.
    Tesla Stock Trend

    TSLA shares dropped 1.8% to 302.63 during Friday's broad stock market sell-off, after slipping 3.4% on Thursday as the stock market responded to Tesla officially "expanding" its ride-hailing service to the Bay Area. However, the Model Y vehicles have a "safety operator" in the driver's seat, making it little different from FSD that can be equipped in current Tesla models.

    In Austin, Texas, the limited robotaxi ride-hailing service has a safety operator in the front passenger seat.

    In late July, TSLA undercut its 50-day and 200-day moving averages as Musk warned of a "few rough quarters" ahead in the Q2 conference call.

    Tesla stock is still in a new base with a traditional 367.7
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