SOC Investment Group Letter Asking SEC To Investigate Tesla, Reject Filing
SOC Investment Group Letter Asking SEC To Investigate Tesla, Reject Filing
SOC Investment Group Letter Asking SEC To Investigate Tesla, Reject Filing
Gurbir S. Grewal
Director
Division of Enforcement
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
100 F Street, NE
Washington, DC 20549
Renee Jones
Director
Division of Corporation Finance
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
100 F Street, NE
Washington, DC 20549
RE: Request for an investigation of Tesla, Inc.’s failure to comply with the consent decree entered
into on September 29, 2018.
The SOC Investment Group (“SOC IG”) requests that the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”)
investigate, and decline to clear the pending proxy of, Tesla, Inc. (“Tesla”) based on its failure to comply
with the consent decree into which Tesla and the SEC entered on September 29, 2018,1 to resolve the
SEC’s complaint alleging that the company did not have in place adequate controls over its disclosure
procedures in violation of Rule 13a-15 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”). The
consent decree required Tesla to implement mandatory procedures to oversee and pre-approve written
communications from then-Chair and CEO Elon Musk, including communications on Twitter, that could
reasonably contain information material to the company or its shareholders.2 The consent decree further
required that Tesla appoint two independent directors to the Board and create an independent committee
to, inter alia, oversee controls and processes regarding disclosures of potentially material information.
Our examination of Tesla’s draft proxy statement filed on June 10, 2022, on Form PRE 14A and other
publicly available sources reveals that:
1. Ample evidence, including statements from CEO Elon Musk, indicates that, contrary to the
requirements of the consent decree, the Tesla Board of Directors has not exercised effective
oversight or established a credible pre-clearance process for Mr. Musk to follow when making
potentially material public statements regarding Tesla.
2. One of the two independent directors Tesla appointed to comply with the consent decree –
Lawrence J. Ellison – is resigning and will not stand for re-election to the Tesla Board.
1
The consent decree was entered as a final judgment in Securities and Exchange Commission v. Tesla, Inc., Dkt. 14,
18-cv-08947-LJL (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 16, 2018). A consent judgment was also entered in a companion case the SEC
brought against Mr. Musk in which Mr. Musk agreed to adhere to the pre-approval process, resign as Chair, and pay
a civil fine. Dkt. 14, Sec. and Exchange Comm’n v. Musk, 18-cv-08865-LJL (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 16, 2018).
2
The parties subsequently agreed to modify this provision of the consent decree between Mr. Musk and the SEC to
require Mr. Musk to obtain pre-approval from a senior securities lawyer employed by the company for any one of
several specific types of communication, including topics whose pre-approval would protect the interests of
shareholders. SEC v. Tesla, Dkt. 17 at 2 (April 30, 2019).
3. Tesla has not appointed or nominated an independent director to replace Mr. Ellison and has not
otherwise maintained either the proportion of independent directors or the ratio of independent to
non-independent directors that held after it initially complied with the consent decree in
December 2018.
As a result of these failures to comply with the consent decree, Tesla shareholders have experienced sharp
gyrations in the value of their shares, largely stemming from exactly the type of off-the-cuff statements
from Mr. Musk that prompted the SEC to take action against Mr. Musk and Tesla originally. Moreover,
as we will illustrate below, as a result of departures by independent directors, Tesla’s failure to nominate
a sufficient number of new independent director candidates, and a reduction in the Board’s size, Tesla’s
Board following the company’s upcoming annual meeting will have a significantly lower proportion of
independent directors than it did immediately following the company’s initial and temporary compliance
with the consent decree. Tesla should be required to return to compliance with the decree by nominating
at least one additional independent director for election to its Board prior to its upcoming annual general
meeting scheduled for August 4, 2022. Tesla’s issuance of its Form PRE 14A appears to reflect a Board
that fails to comply with the SEC’s consent decree and the court’s ongoing consent judgment in this case.
The SEC should not give clearance to Tesla’s preliminary proxy statement until the statement reflects
company action intended to bring it back in compliance with the consent decree once again by nominating
at least one additional independent director to the Board.
Legal Authority
Rule 13a-15 of the Exchange Act requires, inter alia, that issuers must maintain controls over disclosure
and procedures, as well as internal controls over financial reporting. These controls should be reviewed
periodically by the issuer’s principal executive officer and principal financial officer to determine their
effectiveness and should ensure that the procedures governing the disclosure of information required to be
provided on SEC forms are effective. Section 21 (d) of the Exchange Act establishes the SEC’s broad
authority to enforce the Act by seeking injunctive relief in federal district court.
However, subsequent developments strongly encourage the inference that this Committee has not
established or enforced effective procedures to ensure that Mr. Musk’s communications comply with law
and regulation. Since the Committee’s creation, it has been reported that the SEC has at least twice
communicated to Tesla concerning communications by Mr. Musk that were not pre-approved or
otherwise subject to disclosure controls consistent with the settlement,3 and finally issued subpoenas to
Tesla and Mr. Musk stating the SEC had information that tended to show violations of the federal
securities laws after another series of tweets by Mr. Musk in November 2021.4 Furthermore, Mr. Musk
has repeatedly tweeted disparaging remarks about the SEC which it is difficult to believe could have won
approval through any appropriate compliance review process. Some of Mr. Musk’s tweets have clearly
impacted the Tesla share price, as for instance when he asked his followers if he should sell 10% of his
Tesla shares, or when he tweeted that the Tesla share price was “too high.”5 Finally, in connection with
what eventually became his proposal to acquire Twitter, Inc., Mr. Musk first made a delayed filing
concerning the size of his holdings in Twitter, and may have submitted this filing on the wrong form, in
so far as he contemplated attempting to take control of or influence Twitter, before entering into a
definitive merger agreement.6 Given that Mr. Musk plans to acquire Twitter through a significant personal
equity investment, and given that Mr. Musk’s personal wealth is reportedly comprised primarily of Tesla
shares, his statements about the Twitter transaction clearly have consequences for Tesla’s stock price and
for Tesla investors.
Prior to this settlement, Tesla’s Board was comprised of nine directors, of whom the company considered
seven, or 78%, to be independent (a 7 to 2 ratio).Following the December 2018 appointment of two new
independent directors, the Board totaled eleven directors, nine of whom, or 82%, were considered
independent (a 9 to 2 ratio). Over the following three years, the independence level of the board has
fluctuated as a result of additions and departures, with the most recent being Mr. Ellison’s impending
3
“SEC watchdog says two Elon Musk tweets violated settlement deal” The Guardian, June 2, 2021.
4
Opinion and Order, SEC v. Musk, Dkt. 81 at 4-5 (April 27, 2022).
5
Jessica Bursztynsky “Tesla shares tank after Elon Musk tweets the stock price is ‘too high’” CNBC May 1, 2020;
Harry Robertson, “Kimbal Musk cashed out $109 million of Tesla stock just before Elon's tweets whacked the share
price” Market Insider, Nov. 9, 2021.
6
Jacob Kastrenakes, “SEC questions Elon Musk over late Twitter disclosure” The Verge, May 27, 2022.
departure. As a result, as it heads into its 2022 annual meeting scheduled for August 2, 2022, Tesla has a
Board comprised of seven directors, of whom five are independent, equivalent to 71.4% (a 5 to 2 ratio).7
While the consent decree specified the addition of two new independent directors within 90 days of the
settlement, rather than a proportion of the Board that must be independent, we believe that the changes to
Tesla’s Board since 2018, including the departure of one of the two independent directors appointed
pursuant to the consent decree, constitute failure to comply with the decree. Absent any action by the
SEC, following its annual meeting Tesla will have two fewer independent directors than it had before
entering into the settlement, and four fewer than it had when the decree was fully implemented. As noted,
these independent directors would also comprise a smaller proportion of the Tesla Board either prior to or
after the settlement came into effect.
Given the plethora of public statements that the SEC has already reportedly found to be in violation of
securities law and regulation, we see no reason to give Tesla, the Tesla Board, or the Disclosure Controls
Committee the benefit of the doubt. Indeed, it is difficult not to connect the Board’s continuing failure to
comply with the control provisions under the consent decree with the steady erosion of independence on
the Tesla Board. With its upcoming proxy statement, which fails to put forward any additional
independent director candidates, the Board is poised to entrench a further degradation of board
independence unless the SEC acts to preserve the meaning and force of the consent decrees. Instead, the
SEC should inform Tesla that it should nominate at least one additional independent director to its Board
to comply with the consent decree, and decline to clear the company’s definitive proxy statement until it
does so.
Sincerely,
Dieter Waizenegger
Executive Director
7
See Tesla proxy statements on Form DEF 14A for 2019 to 2022. In each year Tesla has designated all directors as
independent except Kimball and Elon Musk.