ISS sides against two Tesla directors, backs split of
Musk's roles
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[May 19, 2018]
By Ross Kerber
BOSTON (Reuters) - Proxy adviser
Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) recommended on Friday that
investors vote against Tesla Inc <TSLA.O> directors Antonio Gracias and
James Murdoch, increasing pressure on the car maker over their roles on
its board.
ISS also backed two shareholder proposals to be voted on at the
company's annual meeting set for June 5, including one that would
require it to separate the current chairman and CEO roles of founder
Elon Musk.
"The complexity of large-scale manufacturing and the challenges of
successfully commercializing new technologies and new manufacturing and
marketing techniques suggest that shareholders would be better served by
having Musk focus on running the company, and allowing an independent
director to run the board," according to a copy of ISS' recommendations
seen by Reuters.
The recommendations by the top proxy adviser echo those made earlier
this week by rival Glass Lewis, although ISS did side with Tesla and
recommend investors vote for Musk's brother and current director Kimbal
Musk.
Union-affiliated activist CtW Investment Group has criticized the three
Tesla directors up for election this year as being too close to Elon
Musk or unqualified.
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A Tesla charging station is seen in Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S. on
September 28, 2017. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
In its report, ISS wrote that Gracias, CEO of Valor Management Corp, is not
sufficiently independent for key board committees. It also cited concerns
regarding the lack of performance-based elements in Tesla's pay plan in
recommending the vote against Gracias, a compensation committee member.
ISS wrote that Murdoch is "overboarded" since he serves as the CEO of
Twenty-First Century Fox Inc <FOXA.O> and on other boards.
A Tesla director not up for election this year because of the board's staggered
election schedule is Steve Jurvetson. He has been on leave from Tesla's board
since November when he also resigned from venture capital firm Draper Fisher
Jurvetson (DFJ) amid an internal DFJ probe into sexual harassment allegations
made against him, which he denied.
ISS wrote Tesla's proxy notes Jurvetson's leave but not the background, and said
that Tesla "shareholders should expect a greater degree of transparency from the
company as to the reason he remains on leave" and about his future status.
(Reporting by Ross Kerber; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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