Greenlight comment adds to Tesla losses from Musk mocking SEC

Reuters 

By Akanksha Rana

Musk stirred nerves about a settlement of his securities fraud lawsuit by calling the SEC the "Shortseller Enrichment Commission" on Twitter, just hours after a ordered him and the regulator to justify their settlement.

"Just want to [sic] that the is doing incredible work," Musk, a of investors betting against the company said in the tweet on Thursday. "And the name change is so on point!"

In its quarterly letter, Greenlight said its short position on was its second-biggest winner in the third quarter. The hedge fund said Musk has been deceptive and the carmaker's woes resemble those of before its collapse.

The electric carmaker's shares plunged last week after the SEC accused Musk, 47, of fraud over "false and misleading" tweets on Aug. 7 that promised to take private and said funding had been secured.

The lawsuit threatened to pull Tesla and Musk into a long drawn-out fight that could have undermined the company's operations and ability to raise capital.

In the settlement that was announced over the weekend, Tesla and Musk instead agreed to pay $20 million each to the regulator while the billionaire - also a large Tesla shareholder - would step down as but continue as

The settlement also provided for the appointment of a new and directors to balance Musk's influence at the company as well as moves to oversee his output on

Peter Haveles, a partner in the Trial and Dispute Resolution Practice Group, said Musk's tweets showed his lack of self discipline and puts intense pressure on Tesla board.

Several users also criticized Musk, who has over 20 million followers on the platform, for his tweets targeting regulators and short sellers.

"I have lost 30 years of my life savings all in $tsla thanks to your tweets please stop," TrendTrader007 wrote.

"If you continue this self destructive path you will lose all your ardent supporters and the goodwill from diehard $tsla longs like me," the user tweeted.

Teresa Goody, a former SEC and of The Goody Group, said Musk's contempt for the regulator shows how "he is undercutting the fair and efficient execution of the markets".

"He may have not had the intent to violate securities laws, but his tweet shows that he is happy to cost an investor money."

In a separate tweet, Musk took another shot at shortsellers and accused of enabling them by saying, "The big funds can & will [sic], as they're suffering a net loss. Index managers like Blackrock pocket [sic] make excessive profit from short lending while pretending to charge low rates for 'passive' index tracking."

Widely seen as the driving force behind the company, Musk's talent for promotion has helped Tesla vault much bigger like and to become America's most valuable company.

As the on the settlement emerged at the weekend, he also told employees in an email that Palo Alto, California-based Tesla was "very close to achieving profitability."

Production numbers on Tuesday showed the company finally meeting its promises on output of the Model 3 sedan, seen as crucial for the its long-term prospects while also fighting hard to overcome logistical issues with deliveries.

Shares of the company, down around 14 percent this year but still up almost 30 percent since the start of 2017, were last down 6.9 percent at $262.63.

(Reporting by in Bengaluru; additional reporting by Johnson in Washington D.C.; Editing by and Arun Koyyur)

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

First Published: Sat, October 06 2018. 00:56 IST