The legal team that voided Elon Musk's record Tesla pay package deserves a tiny fraction of the $5.6 billion legal fee they requested because their lawsuit provided almost no benefit for the company, the electric automaker argued in court papers on Friday. Tesla said the legal team for Richard Tornetta, the shareholder whose lawsuit led to a January ruling voiding Musk's $56 billion pay package, should be paid as little as $13.6 million for their work, which began with a 2018 complaint.
On Thursday, Nio Inc (NYSE: NIO) issued its unaudited first fiscal quarter results that showed its financials were hurt by promotional activity and the price war Tesla Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA) ignited, as loss widened despite improved margins. But Nio managed to lift the spirits with a more optimistic second quarter outlook. Moreover, it recorded YoY growth in May 2024 deliveries, along with Li Auto (NASDAQ: LI) and XPeng Inc (NYSE: XPEV), but Nio was the only with triple-digit percentage gains, while
Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm says it is imperative that Chief Executive Elon Musk's 2018 $56 billion compensation package is reapproved if the EV giant wants to continue "motivating him" to work for the company, according to a regulatory filing Thursday. TSLA shares angled higher early Friday. In a letter sent to Tesla shareholders Wednesday, Denholm implored investors to give Musk his 2018 pay deal.