Business

Tesla’s board forms a special committee to evaluate going private

Tesla‘s board has formed a special committee to evaluate CEO Elon Musk‘s desire to go public, the company said Tuesday. The committee has not yet received a formal proposal from Musk, but it’s another signal that the company is seriously considering the option.

Any action to take the company private will need the approval of the special committee, made up of three Tesla board members, the company said.

Musk publicly floated the possibility of a buyout last week in a tweet, and the company has been offering updates and added context in the days since. Musk defended his original tweet Monday, saying the Saudi Arabian sovereign wealth fund was interested in taking the company private. He also tweeted later Monday that Goldman Sachs and Silver Lake were involved in the discussions.

CNBC reported last week that the Tesla board planned to meet with financial advisers this week to formalize a process to explore going private, and that it would likely ask Musk to recuse himself from the decision.

The special committee is composed of independent board members Brad Buss, Robyn Denholm and Linda Johnson Rice, Tesla said. The committee has retained legal counsel and plans to retain an independent financial adviser.

Here’s the full statement:

Tesla, Inc. (the “Company”) announced today that its Board of Directors has formed a special committee comprised of three independent directors to act on behalf of the Company in connection with Elon Musk’s previously announced consideration of a transaction to take the Company private (the “Going Private Transaction”). The special committee has not yet received a formal proposal from Mr. Musk regarding any Going Private Transaction nor has it reached any conclusion as to the advisability or feasibility of such a transaction.

The special committee is composed of Brad Buss, Robyn Denholm and Linda Johnson Rice. The special committee has retained Latham & Watkins LLP as its legal counsel and intends to retain an independent financial advisor to assist in its review of a formal proposal once received. The Company has separately retained Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati as its legal counsel in this matter.

The special committee has the full power and authority of the Board of Directors to take any and all actions on behalf of the Board of Directors as it deems necessary to evaluate and negotiate a potential Going Private Transaction and alternatives to any transaction proposed by Mr. Musk. The special committee’s grant of authority provides that no Going Private Transaction will be consummated without the approval of the special committee. The special committee expects to provide a further update concerning the process associated with Mr. Musk’s proposal as soon as practicable.

No assurances can be given regarding the likelihood, terms and details of any proposal or potential Going Private Transaction, that any proposal made by Mr. Musk regarding a potential Going Private Transaction will be accepted by the special committee, that definitive documentation relating to any such Going Private Transaction will be executed or that such a transaction will be completed.

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Big Tech Wants You Back in the Office
OpenAI Scored a Legal Win Over Progressive Publishers—but the Fight’s Not Finished
The Creator of Houseparty Is Back. This Time He’s Taking on Slack and Discord
Perplexity Dove Into Real-Time Election Tracking While Other AI Companies Held Back
As Trump Takes a Victory Lap, the Crypto Faithful Kiss the Ring

Leave a Reply