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						Tesla CEO Musk drops pursuit of $72 billion take-private 
						deal
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		 [August 25, 2018] 
		 By Alexandria Sage 
 SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Tesla Inc CEO 
		Elon Musk said late on Friday he would heed shareholder concerns and no 
		longer pursue a $72 billion deal to take his U.S. electric car maker 
		private, abandoning an idea that had stunned investors and drawn 
		regulatory scrutiny.
 
 The decision leaves Tesla as a publicly listed company but raises new 
		questions about its future. Its shares have been trading below their 
		Aug. 7 levels, when Musk announced on Twitter he was considering taking 
		Tesla private for $420 per share, as investors wondered what the 
		long-shot bid meant for Musk's ability to steer the company to 
		profitability.
 
 The move also leaves Musk and Tesla having to fend off a series of 
		investor lawsuits and a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission 
		investigation into the factual accuracy of Musk's tweet that funding for 
		the deal was "secured".
 
 Musk said on Friday that his belief that there is more than enough 
		funding to take the company private was reinforced during the process. 
		He attributed his decision to abandon the bid to feedback he received 
		from shareholders and on the effort proving to be more time-consuming 
		and distracting than he anticipated.
 
		
		 
		"Although the majority of shareholders I spoke to said they would remain 
		with Tesla if we went private, the sentiment, in a nutshell, was 'please 
		don’t do this'," Musk wrote in a blog post on Friday.
 Musk, who owns about a fifth of Tesla, had said earlier this month that 
		he envisioned taking the company private without using the standard 
		method of a leveraged buyout, whereby all the other shareholders would 
		cash out and the deal would be funded primarily with new debt.
 
 Instead, two-thirds of company shareholders, according to his estimate, 
		would have chosen an option of "rolling" their stakes and continuing to 
		be investors in a private company, rather than cashing out. This would 
		significantly reduce the amount of money needed for the deal and avoid 
		further burdening Tesla, which has a debt pile of $11 billion and 
		negative cash flow.
 
 However, Musk said on Friday that a number of institutional shareholders 
		explained to him that they have internal compliance issues that limit 
		how much they can invest in a private company. He added that there is no 
		proven path for most retail investors to own shares were Tesla to go 
		private.
 
 Musk had previously said that Saudi Arabia’s PIF, which became a Tesla 
		shareholder earlier this year with a stake of just under 5 percent, 
		could help him fund the cash portion of the deal, though sources close 
		to the sovereign wealth fund had played down that prospect. PIF is in 
		talks to invest more than $1 billion in aspiring Tesla rival Lucid 
		Motors Inc, Reuters reported last Sunday.
 
		
		 
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			Tesla Motors Inc Chief Executive Elon Musk pauses during a news 
			conference in Tokyo September 8, 2014. REUTERS/Toru Hanai/File Photo 
            
			 
Six members of Tesla's board of directors said in a separate statement that they 
were informed on Thursday that Musk was abandoning his take-private bid. The 
board then disbanded a special committee of three directors it had set up to 
evaluate any offer that Musk submitted. 
"We fully support Elon as he continues to lead the company moving forward," said 
the board statement.
 FOCUS ON MODEL 3
 
 One of Tesla's biggest challenges now is ramping up production of its latest 
vehicle, the Model 3. Multiple "bottlenecks" at its Fremont factory and battery 
factory outside Reno, Nevada have delayed volume production.
 
 Tesla now aims to consistently build 5,000 Model 3s per week, a target it says 
it has managed "multiple times" since first achieving it one week in June.
 
 Musk has said repeatedly since April that Tesla has no need to raise new 
capital, and has promised to be profitable and cash-flow positive in the third 
and fourth quarters. But analysts expect Tesla will require billions of dollars 
more over the next several years to fund ambitious expansion plans and to 
develop new electric premium vehicles to take on German rivals.
 
 Capital-intensive projects in the pipeline include a new Roadster, a Model Y 
SUV, and an electric big-rig. The company's Gigafactory is only partially 
complete, and Musk has said a European plant location will likely be announced 
this year. Financing for a new China plant will come from local debt, he said.
 
 The struggle to launch the Model 3 coincided with an escalating war between Musk 
and short sellers betting that Tesla's high-priced shares were bound to fall as 
the company burned off its cash reserves.
 
 
In explaining one of his reasons to take Tesla private, Musk cited short sellers 
earlier this month, stating that "being public means that there are large 
numbers of people who have the incentive to attack the company."
 Citigroup Inc analysts wrote in a research note earlier this month that, if a 
go-private transaction is looking less likely, "it would be wise for Tesla to at 
least try to raise significant new equity capital sooner rather than later," so 
it can inspire investor confidence.
 
 (Reporting By Alexandria Sage; Editing by Sam Holmes and Adrian Croft)
 
				 
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