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Home / Business

'Please sell our stock': Musk has epic clash with Wall Street during conference call

Washington Post
3 May, 2018 06:59 PM4 mins to read
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Maybe he was tired. Maybe he was hangry. Or maybe the stress of trying to revolutionise the way the world produces cars is finally getting to Elon Musk.

Maybe he was tired. Maybe he was hangry. Or maybe the stress of trying to revolutionise the way the world produces cars is finally getting to Elon Musk.

Whatever the reason, Tesla's billionaire chief executive lashed out at analysts during a wide-ranging earnings call Wednesday, turning the session into what Morgan Stanley's Adam Jonas called "the most unusual call I have experienced in 20 years on the sell-side."

Tesla's stock was down by as much as 8 per cent Thursday morning.

The call started out normal enough. Here are the moments that made it a most unusual earnings call.

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1) "Bonehead questions are not cool."

After answering a series of dense, dry questions from Wall Street analysts, Musk appeared to reach his limit midway through the call. During an exchange between an analyst and Deepak Ahuja, Tesla's chief financial officer, about capital expenditures, Musk interrupted suddenly.

"Excuse me. Next. Boring, bonehead questions are not cool. Next?" he said.

2) "They're killing me!"

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Minutes later, when another analyst asked Musk about Model 3 reservations, the CEO paused - injecting an awkward situation with even more tension - before snapping back once again.

"We're going to go to YouTube," Musk retorted. "Sorry. These questions are so dry. They're killing me!"

The Q&A was handed over to Galileo Russell, host of the YouTube "HyperChange TV," a platform with more than 9,000 subscribers and videos with titles like: "Why I Bought Tesla Today At $255/Share."

Over the next 20 minutes (an eternity in earnings call time) Musk repeatedly praised Galileo and thanked him for asking interesting questions. By the end of their lengthy exchange, Galileo had asked 12 questions.

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3) "It's really outrageous!"

Musk has railed against the press before, even during earnings calls. This time he was more forceful, launching into an unexpected tirade in which he accused journalists of putting drivers' lives at risk by unfairly reporting on autonomous vehicle crashes.

"So they write inflammatory headlines that are fundamentally misleading to the readers. It's really outrageous. And this will be true, even if electric cars were - sorry, if autonomous cars were 10 times safer, so if instead of 1 million deaths you had 100,000 deaths. There is still going to be people who will still sue and say, hey, you're responsible for the death here. And it's like, well, the 90% of people who didn't die are not suing. They're not dead, they're still alive, they just don't know it."

"And, yeah, it's really incredibly irresponsible of any journalists with integrity to write an article that would lead people to believe that autonomy is less safe. Because people might actually turn it off, and then die. So anyway, I'm really upset by this."

4) "I think moats are lame."

Asked why Musk would want to allow other car brands to use Tesla's Supercharger stations across the country instead of creating a "moat" around their infrastructure, Musk answered like a battle-hardened general from a live action role-playing game.

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"I think moats are lame," he said. "If your only defense against invading armies is a moat, you will not last long," he said.

5) "Please sell our stock"

It's not every day you hear a CEO goading someone into selling their company's stock. But that's exactly what Musk did Wednesday, after telling an analyst he had "no interest in satisfying the desires of day traders."

"I couldn't care less," he added. "Please sell our stock and don't buy it."

Musk continued: "I mean, I think that if people are concerned about volatility, they should definitely not buy our stock. I'm not here to convince you to buy our stock. Do not buy it if volatility is scary. There you go."

- Washington Post

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