Advertisement
Tesla
Tech

Elon Musk defends relentless work hours as Tesla enters fateful week

Tesla has marketed its top-of-the-line models that boast head-snapping acceleration as having ‘Insane’ and ‘Ludicrous’ modes. But features some consumers may want in an automobile aren’t necessarily sustainable in an automobile executive

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Tesla shares took a pounding Friday amid fresh fears about the future of the electric carmaker after a wide-ranging interview with chief executive Elon Musk in which he revealed his struggles with exhaustion and a lengthy but unsuccessful effort to find a number two executive. Photo: AFP
Bloomberg

Elon Musk sees no option but to keep working in his own personal Ludicrous mode, no matter the deepening concerns of board members and investors about his health and stability as he propels Tesla Inc. toward a possible rebirth as a private company.

Only a few hours before sunrise in California on Sunday, Musk said he’d just gotten home from the electric-car factory where he has toiled – and often slept – for months to ramp up Model 3 sedan production. The chief executive officer rebutted a post from digital-media mogul Arianna Huffington, who had urged him to take time off lest he fall short of his ambitions to change the world. Sorry, said Musk: “It is not an option.”

Advertisement

“Ford & Tesla are the only 2 American car companies to avoid bankruptcy. I just got home from the factory. You think this is an option. It is not.”

The exchange underscores Musk’s determination to lead Tesla through the turmoil that accelerated after his August 7 tweet suggesting he’d secured funding to take the firm private at $420 a share. Rather than soaring toward that value, the stock has since plummeted 20 percent as parts of Musk’s story unravel and pressure mounts on Tesla’s board for its handling of the iconic CEO. Nothing will get easier this week as he and Tesla’s board align with their separate sets of legal and financial advisers, all amid inquiries from US securities regulators.

On Sunday, the picture became even murkier. Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund – the very investor that Musk described as a linchpin of his plan to take Tesla private – was reported by Reuters to consider buying a stake in another U.S. electric-car company. The Saudis’ Public Investment Fund, which recently bought an almost 5 percent stake in Tesla, was reported to be in talks for a separate $1 billion investment in Lucid Motors Inc. that would give the fund control of that fledgling automaker.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x