After seeing a $55.8 billion pay package for Elon Musk thrown out by a court, Tesla has meticulously constructed a new, larger proposal designed to be a legal fortress. The potential trillion-dollar plan incorporates extremely demanding targets, seemingly to preempt any legal claims that it is not a genuine, at-risk performance award.
The company is still appealing the 2024 court ruling that invalidated the 2018 plan. That decision hinged on the argument that the board was not truly independent and that the performance targets were too easy to achieve. The new plan appears engineered to counter these specific points head-on.
Firstly, the performance hurdles are astronomically higher. The required profit milestones are 28 times greater, and the ultimate valuation target of $8.5 trillion is a monumental challenge. Secondly, the plan adds complex, non-financial deliverables, such as the deployment of one million robotaxis and AI bots, adding layers of difficulty that are hard to dismiss.
By making the plan an “all-or-nothing” proposition where Musk gets zero if he doesn’t at least double the company’s value, Tesla is building a case that this is the ultimate pay-for-performance scheme. The company is betting that this new structure will be robust enough to withstand the intense legal and shareholder scrutiny that is sure to follow its announcement.
A Legal Fortress: How Tesla’s New Pay Deal Tries to Avoid Past Mistakes
81