Tesla names Oracle's Ellison to board in SEC settlement
Tesla named Oracle's Larry Ellison and an executive from Walgreens to its board Friday as part of a settlement with U.S. regulators who demanded more oversight of CEO Elon Musk.
Ellison, the founder and chairman of cloud software firm Oracle, and Kathleen Wilson-Thompson, an executive vice president at Walgreens Boots Alliance, join the board as independent directors, effective immediately.
Musk got into trouble with the Securities and Exchange Commission in early August when he said in a tweet that he had "funding secured" to take the electric car company private at $420 per share.
The SEC accused Musk of committing securities fraud, saying the funding had not been secured and he had duped investors, who drove shares of Tesla up by 11 percent on the day of the tweet. Several weeks later, Musk said the go-private deal was off.
Regulators wanted to force Musk out of his job as CEO but agreed to accept $20 million in penalties from both Musk and Tesla. Musk did agree to step down as chairman for at least three years.
Despite the agreement, Musk has continued to clash with regulators.
Just days after settling the case, Musk taunted the government via Twitter, referring to the SEC as the "Shortseller Enrichment Commission."
Musk has had a long-running feud with short sellers, a category of investors that have bet that the price of Tesla stock will fall.
So far, Musk is winning that fight. Shares of Tesla Inc. are up more than 20 percent since his clash with the SEC.
Tesla named Australian telecommunications executive Robyn Denholm as board chairwoman last month as part of its agreement with the SEC. Although Denholm brings much-needed financial and auto industry expertise to Tesla — which has struggled to produce cars and make money — there hasn't been a marked change in Musk's unorthodox behavior, at least when compared with other chief executives at major corporations that are publicly traded.
Tesla shares slumped 6 percent in early September after Musk was seen appearing to smoke marijuana during an interview that made the rounds on YouTube.
In October, Tesla posted its third quarterly profit in the company's eight-year history as a public company and its first in two years. Tesla has never reported an annual profit.
Tesla shares closed up 5.6 percent to $333.87 on Friday.
United Healthcare CEO latest ... Snack Wrap comeback ... Wantagh homicide arrest ... What's up on LI
United Healthcare CEO latest ... Snack Wrap comeback ... Wantagh homicide arrest ... What's up on LI