Tesla shareholders were reaffirmed on Thursday that Elon Musk would receive more than $45 billion in compensation, but Musk posted the news on his social media platform, X, before the announcement was made formally at the company's annual meeting in Austin, Texas.
“Both Tesla shareholder resolutions have now passed by overwhelming margins,” he wrote in a post late Wednesday night. “Thank you all for your support!!”
Musk's supporters have for months used the social media site he bought for $44 billion in 2022 to drum up support for his big payout, and Tesla's directors have warned he could leave the company if shareholders voted against it.
But Mr. Musk's involvement with X has become a major concern for some Tesla investors, who have complained that his compensation package is diverting his focus from Tesla to other businesses. Mr. Musk has also used the X platform to promote right-wing conspiracy theories and vulgar content, angering some employees and investors.
At X, shareholder approval of the compensation package was applauded by Musk's many supporters, some of whom cheered before the official vote results were announced, including individual investors, friends in the tech industry and members of the media.
“Congratulations E on getting what you're due!” wrote Jason Calacanis, a prominent tech investor and podcast host who is close to Musk.
“The most important message from the vote is that Elon knows he has the support of 90% of retail investors and over 73% of all shares held, and that matters both to him personally and to the future of Tesla,” blogger and YouTube personality Alex Voight wrote.
“That makes a lot of sense,” Musk replied.
“Tesla shareholders appear to approve Elon's CEO package by a wide margin, which is good for Tesla,” wrote Lulu Chen Messabay, a tech executive with 80,000 followers on the platform. “Those with actual stakes can see the business logic that was invisible to a Delaware judge blinded by his personal agenda.”
“A majority of Tesla shareholders approved Elon's compensation package in 2018 and approved it again now. An activist judge struck it down for no reason. The litigation lawyers seeking billions in compensation should get nothing,” wrote David Sachs, a Silicon Valley tech investor and close friend of Musk.
Musk's critics, though in minority, chimed in.
“Tesla shareholders are the dumbest people on the planet,” one poster wrote.
But many Tesla shareholders who had been critical of the compensation package in the weeks leading up to the vote were largely silent in the hours after the decision.