Tesla's board needs to be refreshed: Corporate governance expert

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Electric vehicle giant Tesla (TSLA) has filed a preliminary proxy statement as it seeks shareholder approval for two key items: Elon Musk's nearly $56 billion pay package and the company's proposed reincorporation in the state of Texas.

To provide insight into these developments, Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware Charles Elson Founding Director joins Market Domination.

Elson expresses skepticism about the potential approval of Musk's compensation plan, noting that even if shareholders were to vote in favor, it may not supersede the previous court decision that struck down the package. He emphasizes that the plan being proposed is not meaningfully different from the one that was deemed "not effectively fair" by the courts.

On the proposed move, "The real question is, why would a shareholder vote for a move that the CEO says a court has decided against me because what I did was inequitable? So, I'm going to a jurisdiction where they'll say that's okay," Elson told Yahoo Finance.

Elson argues that, ultimately, the board's responsibility is to ensure that Tesla survives beyond Musk's tenure. "At some point you have to say 'enough.' That's that where I think you need board refreshment. Obviously this board is unwilling to do it," Elson says.

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This post was written by Angel Smith

Video Transcript

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JOSH LIPTON: Tesla filing preliminary proxy statement ahead of its annual meeting, which will be June 13th. The two big requests from the EV maker that shareholders ratify CEO Elon Musk, 2018 pay package and approve the company's reincorporation to Texas, moving it out of Delaware. Joining us now is Charles Elson. The founding director of the Weinberg center for corporate governance at the University of Delaware. Charles, it is good to see you. And I want to start here Charles and help me think through this.

If Tesla shareholders, Charles, if they vote and approve this pay package for Musk, does that mute or supersede the judge's original decision from a few months ago, Charles, which argued there was a breach of fiduciary duty here.

CHARLES ELSON: I don't believe so. I mean, you have to look at the ruling in a couple of ways. She talked about a poor process. She talked about a lack of independence and part of the directors which obviously it's the same plan they put out before. There's nothing new here. They haven't done anything differently. Same people. Same plan. But the key is at the end of the ruling. And this is, I think, quite important. She said that the compensation was not effectively fair. That you didn't need to give this man so much stock because he already had so much stock.