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		Musk's Twitter deal could test Tesla executive bench
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		 [April 26, 2022]  By 
		Hyunjoo Jin 
 SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Elon Musk's move 
		to buy Twitter for $44 billion has raised concerns about the depth of 
		executive talent at his more valuable company, electric carmaker Tesla 
		Inc, in case his attention is further divided by the social media 
		platform.
 
 In announcing the deal on Monday, Musk called Twitter the world's 
		"digital town square" and talked about protecting free speech, but he 
		also rekindled fears that a man who once acknowledged sleeping on the 
		factory floor during the launch of the Model 3 sedan and last year 
		talked of working "crazy hours" only has so much energy to spare.
 
 "Tesla feels very much like a startup despite it being a trillion dollar 
		company," said Tesla investor Ross Gerber, chief executive of wealth 
		management firm Gerber Kawasaki. "It's as big or bigger than the biggest 
		companies in the world, but it doesn't have the management 
		infrastructure like other companies."
 
 On top of that, Tesla is racing to boost production at new plants in 
		Texas and Berlin amid supply-chain snarls and higher raw materials 
		costs, as well as get work at its biggest factory in Shanghai back on 
		track during a spike in COVID-19 cases there. Musk said in January Tesla 
		had too much on its plate and would not introduce new models like 
		Cybertruck this year.
 
		
		 
		Tesla has managed to outrace its problems, but a heavier pull of his 
		focus by Twitter worries investors.
 "I fear this is going to be a distraction," said one fund manager with a 
		significant position in Tesla who asked not to be identified. "He's 
		juggling supply chains and factory delays and the expansion of the 
		energy storage business and this doesn't fit at all."
 
 Shares of Tesla have slid 8% since Musk first disclosed his initial 
		stake in Twitter.
 
 Tesla could not be reached for comment, but one insider at the company 
		who asked not to be identified said investor concerns were "overdone" 
		and Musk was still heavily engaged at the automaker.
 
 Musk also leads rocket company SpaceX, as well as brain-chip startup 
		Neuralink and tunneling venture the Boring Company.
 
 Tesla has seen executive turnover before with the departure of 
		co-founder JB Straubel in 2019 and president Jerome Guillen last year.
 
		
		 
		
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			Tesla CEO Elon Musk attends the Tesla Shanghai Gigafactory 
			groundbreaking ceremony in Shanghai, China January 7, 2019. REUTERS/Aly 
			Song/File Photo 
            
			 
Tesla, founded in 2003, has grown into the most valuable automaker but there are 
only two executives listed along with Musk in its leadership team on the company 
website, compared with 17 at General Motors and 11 at Volkswagen.
 
 Tesla's current high-profile leadership outside of Musk includes Chief Financial 
Officer Zachary Kirkhorn and Senior Vice President Andrew Baglino, who handles 
the powertrain development. Both are known to investors from their appearances 
on Tesla's quarterly earnings conference calls.
 
 Robert Pavlik, senior portfolio manager at Dakota Wealth in Fairfield, 
Connecticut, that owns a limited number of Tesla shares in accounts he manages, 
wondered whether Musk would simply install someone else to lead Twitter.
 
 "It seems like that would be the most logical thing," he said. "It seems like he 
has his hands full with Tesla and SpaceX."
 
 Gerber said perhaps Musk needs a strong No. 2 executive like he has at SpaceX 
with President Gwynne Shotwell.
 
 Ian Beavis, chief strategy officer at auto consultancy AMCI, worries Musk's 
purchase of Twitter, with its controversies around political and social issues, 
could even damage the Tesla brand.
 
 Some investors remain concerned about plans by Musk, who is worth $268 billion 
according to Forbes, to finance the Twitter deal. Twitter said Musk secured 
$25.5 billion of debt and margin loan financing and is providing a $21 billion 
equity commitment. It is unclear whether Musk will sell Tesla shares to help 
fund the deal.
 
 
Musk holds 172.6 million shares in Tesla and he has already borrowed against 
about half of his stock, according to Tesla filings. If he puts up more shares 
as collateral to secure margin loans of $12.5 billion he may be left with 
roughly 30 million unpledged shares, according to a Reuters calculation.
 (Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin in San Francisco; additional reporting by Lewis 
Krauskopf and David Randall in New York, and Victoria Waldersee in Berlin, 
editing by Ben Klayman and Bernard Orr)
 
				 
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