Cathie Wood Profile picture
Feb 5 11 tweets 2 min read Read on X
I believe the Delaware court decision, forcing #Tesla to void the March 2018 vote on Elon Musk’s performance-based pay package, is un-American, an assault on investor rights, and an insult to the Board of Directors of one of the most stunningly successful companies in US history.
I have known Robyn Denholm, Chair of Tesla’s Board, professionally for 17 years since she was named Juniper Networks CFO in 2007. Robyn was and is an independent Director on Tesla’s Compensation Committee.
Robyn is a professional of unquestionable integrity with a no-nonsense, objective, truth-wins-out philosophy. In 2014, when Tesla named her to its Board, I remember thinking that she would add a fresh pair of eyes and enhanced rigor to every part of the process she touched.
Working with @ARKInvest’s General Counsel, who analyzed the 200+ page Delaware Court decision, I have concluded that legal nuances and the controversial interpretation of them have missed the forest for the trees, spectacularly and unfairly.
Tesla’s Board incentivized @elonmusk with a Herculean task that most analysts and auto manufacturers did not believe possible. Based on our research centered on Wright’s Law, we believed that Tesla could meet the performance goals, but only with brilliant execution.
In fact, we were thrilled to learn in February 2018 that Elon Musk and the Board were aiming so high, reaching for our bull case price target in 2023 of $4,000, or ~$265 on a split adjusted basis, a ~13-fold increase from roughly $21 when I announced our price target on CNBC.
On behalf of our clients, @ARKInvest voted for Elon Musk’s compensation, as did ~80% of shareholders. Nearly five years later, a Delaware judge has overruled the Board and shareholders, the latter whom had the benefit of ample debate about the incentive plan’s probability.
Agreeing to no salary during those five years, Elon also would have received much less performance-related compensation if he had achieved less than the lofty milestones associated with our bull case. Instead, he shocked and delighted shareholders.
Thanks to Elon’s ingenuity and dogged determination, Tesla hit our bull case target price in 2021, two years earlier than we anticipated. Since then, many shareholders have shared stories with us about how our research inspired their investment in $TSLA and changed their lives.
They bought their first homes, put their children through college, and added to their retirement nest eggs, thanks to $TSLA. Tesla’s story epitomizes why people have flocked to America. The Delaware court’s decision is an embarrassment to our country’s ideals and a travesty.
If you would like to track the history of our research, please search for Tesla on . @TashaARK and @skorusARK, and @wintonARK have done amazing work to help our clients on this journey.ark-invest.com

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More from @CathieDWood

Oct 26, 2023
Government statistics do not seem to be capturing how weak the economy is. Many companies are reporting shockingly weak revenues. UPS’s US delivery volume growth is worse today than in 2007-2009. After falling for nearly two years, it dropped another ~11% last quarter. Image
At first I thought that Amazon still was taking share and causing problems, but this chart suggests that market share has changed very little since 2020. Image
This week, another economic bellwether, 3M, reported that global organic sales dropped more than 3% year over year on a local currency basis last quarter. The services side of the economy is unlikely to escape the global monetary tightening that is gripping these companies.
Read 7 tweets
Aug 15, 2023
China is exporting deflation in a more profound way than I believe many economists and strategists appreciate. All else equal, the 15% depreciation in the yuan relative to the dollar in the last year should have increased its PPI inflation rate by 15%. Instead it has dropped 4%.
In other words, the deflationary vortex emanating from China is approaching 20% (15%+4%), highlighted by the burgeoning defaults in Chinese real estate and trust companies.
After it entered the World Trade Organization in 2001, China’s real GDP grew at a double digit rate for nearly 20 years. Rapid growth can cover many economic sins, typically excessive debt and associated leverage. Those excesses are surfacing in China now.
Read 5 tweets
Mar 23, 2023
Ironically, as crypto assets soared during the Silicon Valley Bank meltdown, this administration suggested that investors in regional banks - equity and bond holders - should prepare to be “wiped out” in the aftermath of an unprecedented 20-fold increase in the Fed funds rate.
Now we are hearing anecdotes not only that businesses and individuals are hedging their fiat assets with some crypto assets but that they also are lowering risk and increasing returns by shifting from low yielding bank deposits into higher yielding money market funds, a win-win.
As a result, now that they can borrow at will from a government facility at ~4.5%, regional banks seem to be moving from a liquidity crisis to a slower moving solvency crisis.
Read 7 tweets
Mar 16, 2023
If you are correct, Congressman, then the FDIC and others will prevent the US from participating in the most important phase of the internet revolution. Like you, I believe regulators are using crypto as a scapegoat for their own lapses in oversight of traditional banking.
Despite a yield curve that inverted last July - and credit default swaps that started flashing red - the Fed continued to vote UNANIMOUSLY to jack rates up in 75 basis point increments. They paid no heed to commodity prices and other inflation indicators that were unwinding.
Many banks made two assumptions that are haunting them now. The first was that interest rates would remain low for an extended period of time, and the second, that deposits would continue to increase. After all, they had not declined on a year-over-year basis since the 1930s.
Read 12 tweets
Mar 15, 2023
The echo is more like the early 1920s, after a pandemic and a war - the Spanish Flu and WWI - as three major innovation platforms were evolving into mass market opportunities - electricity, telephony, and the automobile, contributing to the breathtaking “Roaring Twenties”
In response to a supply chain- and war-related surge in inflation, the gold standard forced the newly formed Fed to drain money from the economy, pushing pricing from a 24% inflationary peak in June 1920 to a -15% deflationary trough one year later in June 1921.
Now, inflation - which peaked in the 8-10% range last year - is likely to surprise on the low side of expectations this year, dropping below 2% and perhaps turning negative. The banking crisis could lead to “bad deflation” while innovation generates “good deflation”.
Read 6 tweets
Mar 13, 2023
US demand deposits - which make up the vast majority of M2 - have been falling since last August. Now we are seeing the consequences of the yield curve inversion that began last July, which I feared last September and described in the thread below. The inversion has worsened.
Many banks parked the COVID stimulus gusher in long term bonds at record low 1-2% interest rates, never expecting the Fed funds rate to surge a record-breaking 19-fold to 4.75% in less than a year. Now deposit outflows are forcing them to sell “safe” securities at losses.
Deposits are leaving banks to take advantage of higher yields in money market and other funds. At Silicon Valley Bank, start-ups were responding to a drought in venture capital funding by draining deposits to fund their operations.
Read 8 tweets

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