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Tesla’s chief executive officer Elon Musk throwing off his coat for a jig onstage during a delivery of Tesla’s China-made Model 3 cars in Shanghai on January 7, 2020. Photo: REUTERS

Elon Musk is poised for a US$2.1 billion pay day as Tesla’s market value surpasses the sum of Hyundai, Toyota, Volkswagen

  • Tesla’s average trailing market value over six months rose above US$150 billion on Tuesday
  • Musk is now able to exercise an additional 1.69 million stock options, though he must wait at least five years before he can sell them
Tesla

Tesla’s chief executive officer Elon Musk unlocked the second chunk of his moonshot pay award.

The electric-car maker’s average trailing market value over six months rose above US$150 billion on Tuesday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, despite a dip in the company’s share price.

That means Musk is now able to exercise an additional 1.69 million stock options, though he must wait at least five years before he can sell them.

The options have a strike price of US$350.02, meaning he would reap a US$2.1 billion gain if he exercised and could immediately sell the shares.

Musk unlocked the first tranche of the award in May, when Tesla’s average six-month market value topped US$100 billion. The company’s shares have more than doubled since then, and the company is now worth more than Toyota Motor, Volkswagen and Hyundai Motor combined.

Musk’s compensation package - the largest corporate pay deal ever struck between a CEO and a board of directors - includes 20.3 million options, split into 12 tranches, that could yield the founder more than US$50 billion if all goals are met, according to Tesla’s estimates.

A representative for the company didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Tesla shares fell 4.5 per cent in New York trading Tuesday to US$1,568.36, paring this year’s gain to 275 per cent.

For Musk to unlock the third tranche, Tesla must reach a six-month average market capitalization of US$200 billion, and either post revenue of US$35 billion or US$3 billion in adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda), over four consecutive quarters.

Musk, 49, is the world’s ninth-richest person with a US$71.5 billion fortune, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

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