Stock market regulatory authority sues Elon Musk for fraud

IANS  |  New York 

The on Thursday presented charges against the of Inc., Elon Musk, accusing him of fraud after last month he announced on that he was planning to take the automaker private.

The SEC, which filed its lawsuit in a New York court, says that Musk issued "false and misleading" statements and failed to properly notify regulators of important company events, reported.

After news broke of the SEC suit, shares of plunged 10.63 percent in after-market trading and are currently about 30 percent below the highest value they reached last year of $387.46.

The accusations come less than two months after Musk posted his tweet on August 7 announcing that he was considering taking private at a price of $420 per share and claiming that he had found guaranteed financing for the deal.

"Am considering taking Tesla private at $420. Funding secured," tweeted Musk.

After the unusual announcement, Tesla shares rose precipitously in price in just minutes, climbing more than 7 percent and closing the trading session 11 percent higher.

After the initial tweet, Musk posted subsequent tweets and reemphasized his intention to take the firm private, and the SEC cited those additional tweets in its complaint as additional misleading statements.

The SEC contends that Musk did not ask Tesla shareholders to approve the key terms of taking the firm private.

The SEC says in its complaint that "Musk knew that he (1) had not agreed upon any terms for a going-private transaction with the Fund or any other funding source; (2) had no further with representatives of the Fund beyond their 30 to 45 minute meeting on July 31; (3) had never discussed a going-private transaction at a share price of $420 with any potential funding source."

Under current US law, company officials are responsible for erroneous statements they make regarding their firms or omitting information needed by investors or shareholders to make an informed decision about their interests in the firm.

The SEC does permit the use of by firms to disseminate information under the condition that the decision to do so be communicated to shareholders.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, September 28 2018. 07:22 IST