| Elon Musk’s $1 trillion stock award gets more ridiculous the more you look into it
 
 
   
 Jameson Dow | Oct 18 2025 - 9:00 am PT
 
 58 Comments
 
 
   
 Tesla, a company that prides itself on not advertising, is in the  midst of a serious marketing effort. In doing so it’s exploiting  employees, attacking shareholders, and retaining outside strategy firms  to help it advertise.
 
 It’s running these ads not to boost its  falling sales,  but rather to advocate for another unprecedented award for its CEO,  which would keep the company stuck with him for years even as earnings  drop precipitously under his direction.
 
 In September, Tesla’s board proposed  a stock award worth up to $1 trillion  for CEO Elon Musk. It includes several milestones regarding Tesla stock  and product performance, each of which unlocks tens of billions of  dollars for Musk.
 
 It’s the largest award proposed for any CEO of any company by  multiple orders of magnitude – with previous proposed Musk awards  holding the second and third place positions as well. The proposal will  be voted on by TSLA shareholders at Tesla’s shareholder meeting on  November 6.
 
 Previously, Tesla’s board has attempted to propose smaller, but still  absurd, stock awards. A previous proposal to give Musk a ~$55 billion  pay package was  ruled illegal after the board misled shareholders and was found to be too closely tied to Musk. Tesla then put that same pay package  up to another vote, using the same dishonest tactics, where it passed again.
 
 Unsurprisingly, given that the same Elon-tied board engaged in the  same misleading behavior as it had before, the pay package was  again voided, saving Tesla shareholders $55 billion. That award is now  in court again, with another decision soon to come.
 
 The decisions were made by Delaware’s Court of Chancery, a famously  pro-corporate court, and this resulted in Musk recommending a knee-jerk  move of Tesla’s incorporation to Texas, a state with little established  corporate law but where Musk thought he could exercise greater control  over shareholders.
 
 But the story has continued. Tesla’s board moved in August to  give Musk an “Interim Award” worth ~$26 billion, which would still be the largest pay package for any CEO in history. It’s also more than the  total profit Tesla has made over its lifetime (Tesla’s quarterly profits have been dropping for the last couple years, under Musk’s direction).
 
 Despite all of this, and Musk currently holding position as the  richest man in the world, the company he runs has been engaging in  underhanded marketing efforts to push its new proposed trillion-dollar  reward, which would have tangible harms for shareholders and for the  company they’re invested in.
 
 Tesla ‘doesn’t do ads,’ but that’s changing for Musk’s $1T
 
 Tesla has long prided itself on not relying on traditional paid  advertisements. Instead, it has relied on word of mouth marketing,  social media posts, and press coverage of the company’s ambitious  promises in order to stay forefront in the public eye. Musk has stated  that he “hates advertising” and that running ads is the equivalent of  lying (even as he  runs ads with lies in them).
 
 But that’s changing. Tesla  hired then  quickly fired an ad team, but continues to do  social media marketing largely on Twitter, the platform that Musk  overpaid billions of dollars for and then  turned into a white supremacist haven, causing  advertisers to flee (who Musk  told to leave and  then sued to try to force them back).
 
 Of course, given that this is the internet, some of that social media marketing  seems to be in the form of bots, so even the word of mouth surrounding Tesla is no longer real.
 
 After chasing away advertisers, Musk resorted to a  common tactic of his – channeling money from one of his public companies into one of his private companies,  in the form of paid Tesla advertisements.
 
 Most recently, those advertisements have been focused not on marketing Tesla’s products to twitter users, but rather on  marketing Musk’s stock award.
 
 In fact, Tesla even recently broke the last bastion of its reluctance towards certain marketing efforts, and  started running paid TV ads, but it wasn’t to market the company’s products, rather just to market Musk’s $1 trillion pay package.
 
 Running any ads in the first place for a shareholder vote  seems odd – shareholder proposals usually do come alongside a board  recommendation, and that’s usually enough to convince shareholders to  vote alongside the board (at least, if the board has proven itself to be  working in the best interests of the company, which  may not apply here).
 
 But it’s exceptionally rare to see a company undertake a whole  advertising campaign, with produced videos, paid ads, and an outside  strategy firm to help, especially when those ads don’t just target  shareholders, but are on platforms for the general public (though this  is perhaps a recognition that a huge percentage of Americans own TSLA  stock via their retirement plans, whether they purchased the stock  themselves or not).
 
 And the ads are… questionable.
 
 Tesla’s marketing effort has been exploitive to say the least
 
 Just about every day, Tesla has filed a  new document with the Securities and Exchange Commission detailing another solicitation it has made regarding the upcoming shareholder vote.
 
 Often these are just  tweets  by the company or by Musk related to the shareholder vote. Musk has  made several statements supporting the vote to his millions of followers  on the social media app that he purchased so that he could  control narratives and quash free speech on it.
 
 Tesla has also purchased several ads on Google, moving beyond just Musk-owned properties.
 
 But these solicitations also include produced videos by the company  telling shareholders to vote on it. Two of these ads include  testimonials by Tesla employees, stating how Tesla stock improved their  lives.
 
 In the videos, the two Tesla employees state that they wouldn’t have been able to own a home if it weren’t for Tesla stock.
 
 One,  Kiyoko, invokes her dead father, who would have been proud to see her owning a home.
 
 Another employee,  Sarah, invokes her daughter, who couldn’t have had a quinceañera if not for Tesla stock (notably, Musk is also the  largest individual funder of a group that is  racially profiling Mexican-Americans, staking out  high school graduations to break up families and putting pressure on local businesses, including  quinceañera dress-sellers).
 
 Put aside for a moment the nightmare scenario where housing is so  unaffordable that workers need to feel lucky to be able to afford a  place to live after having held a job for 12 years (and apparently are  unable afford that house through salary alone, instead needing to rely  on a  highly overvalued  stock to get them there), these emotional statements seem designed to  distract from the rational case against this stock award, and to pull on  heart strings instead.
 
 They also conflate stock options for the employees that keep Tesla  running, and who are counting on those options to help pay for their  housing, with an unprecedented stock award for its part-time CEO so he  can, uh… bribe more political candidates?
 
 And if you’re wondering how giving the world’s richest man a trillion  dollars will help Kiyoko afford a home or Sarah afford a quinceañera,  you’re not wrong to wonder. These ought to be two different concepts, but because of the nefarious structure of the shareholder vote, they’re not.
 
 Tesla stock helped employees. Now it can’t, since Elon took it all
 
 One of the questions being asked is whether or not to refill Tesla’s  “general share reserve” of shares set aside to be granted to employees  as compensation.
 
 Proposal 3 not only fills the general share reserve with 60 million  shares as compensation for Tesla’s current and future employees (of  which the company currently numbers ~120,000 strong), but also  fills a “special share reserve” with nearly 208 million shares for one  single part-time employee, Elon Musk, who spends most of his time  working for companies other than Tesla (and whose  interests can be directly opposed to Tesla’s).  The board would be able to give these shares, currently worth around  $91 billion, to Musk at their discretion without further shareholder  approval and is not attached to any milestones, unlike the $1 trillion.
 
 This is one of many issues brought up by several pension funds who  named their concerns with the shareholder proposals.  Normally, it would seem reasonable to split up the “general” and  “special” share reserve votes, but Tesla has seen it fit to combine the  two – such that if you want Tesla to be able to compensate employees  with shares, you must also accept that Musk will have 3.5x as many  shares set aside for him personally as will be set aside for every other  employee at the company combined.
 
 It must feel incredibly insulting for the engineers who actually  design the cars, the manufacturing associates who build them, the  software team that continues to improve the best software out there, the   best-in-the-biz charging team, et cetera, to see a guy who spends most of his time working for other companies (or  pretending to be good at video games on his private jet) and be told that he’s worth hundreds of thousands of times more than you are.
 
 Even worse, the reason this vote is necessary is because the share reserve was recently drained… to pay Elon Musk.
 
 When Musk’s friends on the Tesla board decided to  hand him an “Interim Award” of $26 billion without a shareholder vote,  the process through which they did this was to simply award shares to  Musk that had previously been set aside in Tesla’s share reserve.
 
 Those shares had been intended to be available for years to come, as  compensation for employees, to help Tesla attract and compensate talent  (as the heartstring-tugging videos above suggest). But instead, almost  the entire reserve was drained to give to Musk, with only one  stipulation: that he continue working at Tesla for two years.
 
 But that’s only part of the shares that Musk would get if  these shareholder votes pass, because those 208 million shares aren’t  even associated with the separate $1 trillion award in Proposal 4, which  would include over 423 million shares. So now we’re up to 630+ million  shares for Musk (~276B at current TSLA valuation), and only 60 million  for every other employee at Tesla combined, being voted on at this  shareholder meeting.
 
 And even if proposal 4 is voted down, the board could still  give Musk $91 billion worth of stock, and it’s holding employees’  compensation hostage to ensure that it be able to do so.
 
 Musk gets largest payday ever for being a bad employee
 
 The Interim Award was given with the rationale that it might “focus  and energize” the CEO, who has been distracted with his running of  several other companies and his world famous  social media addiction as Tesla earnings and sales have been dropping in an otherwise  rising market.
 
 Tesla’s sales drops are largely due to the  brand damage Musk himself is doing, and also its  lack of innovation under his  direction – but at least he can  sell some cars to himself to try to hide this failure.
 
 Tesla  got saved in Q3 by a pull-forward in demand due to the end of US tax credits (which  Musk himself backed, despite that his actions  have hurt Tesla in  more ways than one), but otherwise its earnings have been  trending dangerously close to unprofitability.
 
 Thus, this marks not only the  largest payday in the history of the world, but the largest payday given with explicit acknowledgement that the payee is an underperforming and distracted employee, leading the company in a worse direction.
 
 And yet, the board wants shareholders to approve even more  pay for that bad employee, and has attached no strings to require he  stop distracting himself with other companies, merely hoping that the  promise of a large payday will coax Musk into being less terrible at his  job than he has recently.
 
 But it has to be an exceptionally large payday if Musk is to complete his goals (and to be clear, they are Musk’s goal, not the company’s), given the inflated nature of TSLA stock.
 
 This is about power… and money
 
 Musk wants this award because he wants more control over Tesla. He  has stated clearly many times that he “doesn’t feel comfortable” with  his current ownership percentage, even though it’s the result of him  continually selling Tesla stock to fund his white supremacist, anti-free-speech project on twitter.
 
 After his many stock sales, his ownership percentage has diluted from  around a quarter of the company in 2021 to around 13% today. Musk has  threatened Tesla shareholders, saying that that  “the future of the world” relies on him getting $1 trillion and that  if he doesn’t get 25% of the company he will take AI and robots elsewhere (nevermind that he already has sent Tesla resources to his private company in  multiple  ways, and  wants Tesla shareholders to bail twitter/xAI out, another  proposal on the current slate of votes).
 
 Musk having more voting power would protect him from shareholder proposals that seek to improve  Tesla’s corporate governance,  as several proposals in front of shareholders right now would do. These  include modifications to Tesla’s bylaws enabling changes through  majority vote rather than supermajority vote, and repealing the  threshold requirement to bring derivative actions against the company.
 
 If Musk had 25% of the company, that makes it a lot easier for him to  vote a chunk of his shares towards consolidating his power, and makes  him less accountable to shareholders who are rightly concerned about  Tesla’s current  dropping sales and earnings under his direction.
 
 And given that the vote on the current pay package somehow allows  Musk to vote his own shares in support of it (unlike the last one, where  he was recused), there’s no reason he couldn’t continue to do the same  in the future, and have even more opportunity to enrich himself and  consolidate power at the cost of all other Tesla shareholders.
 
 But beyond the power, it’s also about money (as  Fred here at Electrek pointed out).  If Musk wanted to increase his ownership percentage, he could have  Tesla engage in stock buybacks, which would not only decrease dilution  for him but also for other shareholders who hold long term. This would  also increase share prices, something shareholders might like to see  (but then again, it would also require profits, which have tanked  recently under Musk’s direction).
 
 Instead, the plan increases dilution for everyone by printing hundreds of millions of shares – dilution for everyone except Musk, who gets far more shares than everyone else combined.
 
 But you better not bring that up, because if so, Tesla might put out a mean tweet about you.
 
 Tesla pays for PR to attack its own shareholders
 
 We covered a  group of pension funds who brought up many of these legitimate concerns in a dispassionate  letter  sent to Tesla investors, including the draining of the share reserve to  pay Musk, the negative effect of dilution on current shareholders, and  others. The concerns are well-argued and the letter is signed by several  public pension funds, whose interest is generally in stable long-term  returns, rather than volatility or speculation.
 
 Many public funds are required to invest significantly in funds like the S&P 500, of which  TSLA is an outsized member.  They are also interested in a generally less volatile economy overall,  and thus, it makes sense that they would argue in favor of stability.
 
 The funds also stated that the requirements for various tranches of  Musk’s share reward are somewhat arbitrary, and that many could be met  easily with creative interpretations.  Others have pointed out the same,  recognizing even meeting the easiest targets would pay Musk more than  the lifetime pay of the next 8 highest-paid CEOs combined.
 
 But after these valid criticisms were lodged, Tesla responded in a  way that should not be a surprise for longtime watchers of the company –  by doubling down and firing back.
 
 Tesla put out a tweet titled “ setting the record straight,”  essentially just making the same argument it has already made. It  claims that there is no way to creatively interpret product goals, that  the board is “disinterested” (that is, they do not hold a personal  financial interest in the outcome, which is an odd thing to say about  the personal friends and family of Musk on Tesla’s board), and that this  plan, which will dilute current shareholders’ holdings in order to  retain  a bad CEO for the next decade, is “in the interest of shareholders.”
 
 It also claims that none of the operational milestones are “easy” and that previously-cited  creative interpretations  would not be possible. However, even with only below-average share  growth and flat vehicle delivery growth, Tesla is on course to easily  reach some of the simpler milestones (well, perhaps this is  hard with a CEO who is seemingly doing his best to ruin company  performance…), which would still result in a record payday many times  over.
 
 And it ends the tweet with a slight against the performance of the  various public funds who signed on to the letter. Tesla claims that it  has provided much better returns than each of the funds, which have had  6.51%-13.3% annualized returns since 2018. Notably, these are in line  with the expected returns that a public fund counts on (with S&P  averaging ~8%), who typically invest in stable companies rather than  speculating on high-risk investments or tech companies with  unheard-of 250:1 P/E ratios (which only gets higher as price goes up and  earnings go down).
 
 Sending this tweet about an active shareholder vote is already a rare  move as far as public companies go, but Tesla, who does not advertise,  also seems to have retained an outside firm to further publicize its  rebuttal. Due to our  previous article  on this matter, we got an email from FGS Global, which bills itself as  “the world’s leading stakeholder strategy firm,” directing our attention  to the tweet. We asked FGS why it thought diluting shareholders by $1  trillion was truly the optimal strategy for stakeholders, and did not  receive an answer.
 
 Since then, proxy advisory group ISS, the largest independent advisor  for institutional investors which offers disinterested insight into  shareholder proposals, has also  recommended against voting for the proposals. Tesla responded by  attacking ISS in a tweet.
 
 Even if you think Musk is necessary, this isn’t Tesla’s best option    Defenders of the plan will argue that shareholders will benefit if  share targets are met. But that’s a big “if,” and even if they are met,  how much of that can we attribute to the direction of a distracted CEO  (with no requirement to not be distracted), and is it really  necessary to give that CEO a full trillion dollars worth of dilution in  order to get the performance requested?
 
 Again, Musk has already been given the largest payday in history out  of shares that were earmarked for employees, and now a payday that’s over thirty times larger than that  has been proposed. Even at the inflated share prices that would be  necessary to meet milestone targets for the award, shareholders would  still have their voting rights and share appreciation diluted by about  12%.
 
 Could a similar goal not be achieved with much smaller dilution, say  around 1%, which would still be the largest payday ever proposed for a  CEO? And is Musk even worth that much to begin with, given his poor  recent performance and his behavior that has proven to be hostile to his  own company’s interests? (via  lobbying for anti-EV policy, doing Tesla  brand damage, self-dealing to  benefit his own private companies with Tesla’s public assets,  firing Tesla’s best teams on an ego trip, and so on)
 
 Heck, even the option of buying xAI in an all-stock deal, at its  absurd $200B valuation,  would cost Tesla less than these two proposals would (~$276B, at  current TSLA valuation). This idea would also do more to ensure Musk’s  focus as then he would no longer split his time between his private  companies which have his current interest and his public one, since all  would be under the same umbrella.
 
 To be clear, that would also be a terrible idea, due to  ethical concerns that are currently  subject to a lawsuit over  Musk conflicts of interest (and surprise surprise, that terrible idea is also  up for a shareholder vote).  But the fact that there are potential legal problems with each of the  options the board did consider is perhaps an indication that another  individual, one without such a history of working in his own interests  rather than the company’s, would be a better fit for Tesla.
 
 Bad for employees, shareholders, and Tesla’s mission/ethics… so why is Tesla pushing it?    It seems quite clear that the option given to shareholders is not the  optimal solution, but due to Tesla’s captured board, it’s the option  that’s been put on the table. And since it  benefits them (in fact, so much that the board  had to return nearly $1 billion in excessive compensation) and their personal friend Elon Musk, it’s the only option shareholders get to vote on.
 
 Were the board interested in Tesla’s best interests, some other  options might be on the table. But they aren’t; they’re interested in  their friend Elon’s best interests. The driving factor isn’t the goals  of Tesla or its shareholders, but the goals of Elon.
 
 If the board were independent and truly interested in Tesla’s best  performance, it wouldn’t saddle the company with a hostile CEO for a  decade, it wouldn’t overpay that CEO, it would be more sensitive to  dilution, it would engage in options that are less likely to result in  legal challenges, it would at least ensure that CEO  work in the company’s interests, and it would use a more deliberative process than having a few of  that CEO’s friends  propose a comically large payday just so he can get himself out of the  hole he dug for himself with a social media addiction so bad that he  overpaid for his favorite app ( twice).
 
 The only concessions the board has made to any idea of  reasonable governance is that it made the adoption of a succession plan a  prerequisite for the last 2 (out of 12) tranches of stock. So Musk can  still get ~558 million shares of stock without even giving a thought to  what future the company might have with competent  corporate governance.
 
 Will shareholders finally reject this ridiculousness?
 
 And yet, shareholders may vote for it,  just like last time.  That last vote had about the same downsides as this one, but TSLA  shareholders voted for it anyway (twice, even after it was revealed they  were  lied to on the first vote).
 
 But shareholders must currently feel trapped by Musk’s rhetoric. Even though he’s  a bad CEO in terms of company performance, his  constant overpromising has led to high appreciation of Tesla stock, with the market seeming much more interested in Musk’s  constantly-delayed fantasies than in Tesla’s  current performance. Essentially, Musk is saying “ give me $1 trillion or I won’t lie for you anymore.”
 
 Shareholders are worried that if Musk is gone, the market will no  longer overvalue its future performance, and there might be a correction  towards more realistic share price levels. Even though a competent CEO  might benefit Tesla’s financial performance as a company, it may harm  TSLA’s status as a meme stock.
 
 And that’s what this particularly frothy market has become. Rather  than investing in a company to focus on its products or even its future,  “investors” have become consumers of the stock first, and focused on  maintaining whatever illusions have resulted in these absurd price  levels. TSLA shareholders have made the wrong decision before on an  intrinsically similar issue, so it wouldn’t be a big surprise if they do  the same here, only even dumber and ~20x bigger.
 
 It is perhaps heartening that Tesla has seen it necessary to market the award so heavily, as Tesla can see results as they come in.
 
 Top comment by  Blake
 
 Liked by 17 people
 
 As mentioned previously, Tesla has a huge proportion of direct  retail shareholders who, by definition, are far less savvy in financial  markets & whose thinking is often driven by occupying echo chambers.  They are easily swayed by 'cult of personality' (just ponder how many  people think Musk is a qualified/certified engineer, some even believe he’s a scientist), so I would be highly surprised if they don't vote in line with Board recommendations.
 
 View all comments
 
 The more Tesla markets, the more it may suggest that the company may  not like the numbers its seeing, and is desperate to swing the vote in  its favor. (Either that, or the whole thing is engineered to give Musk  something to act victimized about after the fact, when inevitably the  award sees legal challenges again.)
 
 For Tesla’s sake, for the EV transition as a whole, and perhaps for  the future of the world, let’s hope it’s the former
 
 electrek.co
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