Fortune | FORTUNE 9小时前
Elon Musk retains title as the highest-paid CEO in history with $26 billion pay package—and the only thing he has to do is show up for two years
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

特斯拉董事会再次批准了CEO埃隆·马斯克的一项巨额薪酬方案,总额高达290亿美元,这使其成为史上薪酬最高的CEO。此举发生在德拉瓦州法官两次推翻马斯克此前大规模薪酬方案之后。董事会认为,巨额薪酬对于留住并激励马斯克至关重要,尤其是在人工智能人才竞争日益激烈的情况下。新方案与以往不同,不再设置复杂的股东价值目标,而是要求马斯克在未来两年内继续担任CEO或高级执行职务,并持有股票至2030年,以此来确保他专注于公司发展并吸引新人才。尽管部分投资者和专家对此薪酬表示质疑,认为其缺乏业绩挂钩且有“迷雾式授予”的嫌疑,但特斯拉已通过将公司注册地迁至德克萨斯州来构建更强的法律壁垒,以应对潜在的股东挑战。

💰 **天价薪酬重获批准,马斯克获得290亿美元新薪酬方案**:特斯拉董事会为CEO埃隆·马斯克重新设定了创纪录的薪酬,总额高达290亿美元。此前,该方案曾两次被德拉瓦州法官撤销,但董事会认为这是留住和激励“非凡人才”的必要举措,尤其是在人工智能领域的激烈人才竞争中,马斯克是无可匹敌的关键人物。

🚀 **薪酬方案调整,侧重留任而非业绩**:与之前的“宏大计划”不同,新方案不再设置复杂的股东价值实现门槛。马斯克只需在未来两年内继续担任特斯拉CEO或高级执行职务,并承诺持有股票至2030年,即可获得这笔巨额奖励。此举旨在确保马斯克专注于公司发展,并吸引新的人才加入,以保持特斯拉在人工智能、机器人和自动驾驶领域的竞争力。

⚖️ **法律博弈与注册地迁移,规避潜在挑战**:在德拉瓦州法官两次裁定其薪酬无效后,特斯拉采取了法律和结构性策略。公司将注册地从特拉华州迁至德克萨斯州,并修改了公司章程,要求挑战者至少持有3%的特斯拉股份(价值超30亿美元)才能提起诉讼。此举旨在利用德克萨斯州更为宽松的商业法律环境,为马斯克的薪酬方案提供更强的法律保护,降低未来被挑战的风险。

📉 **投资者反应两极分化,公司治理引关注**:尽管许多散户投资者支持马斯克的薪酬方案,但部分机构投资者对此表示强烈不满。他们认为,在公司销售和股价表现不佳的情况下,如此巨额的薪酬是不合理的,并且董事会未能履行对股东的责任,过度迁就CEO。有投资者直言,即使增加240亿美元的股权,也可能不足以激励马斯克投入足够的时间和精力来扭转公司下滑的局面,呼吁更好的公司治理。

The Tesla board has reinstated CEO Elon Musk as the highest-paid in history with a staggering new $29 billion pay package. His new deal with the $970 billion electric-vehicle maker comes after a Delaware judge twice rescinded Musk’s previous moonshot megagrant. Musk’s pay has been held up in litigation for the past seven years. 

“It is imperative to retain and motivate our extraordinary talent, beginning with Elon,” Tesla board chair Robyn Denholm and fellow director Kathleen Wilson-Thompson wrote in a letter to shareholders. “The war for AI talent is intensifying, with recent months including multi-billion-dollar acquisitions of companies and nine-figure cash compensation packages for non-founder, individual AI engineers.”

Even in that select group, “no one matches” Musk, the board members wrote. Thus, the nearly $30 billion award is essential to keeping Musk focused on Tesla—and getting him to recruit new talent to keep the EV manufacturer competitive in AI, robotics, and robotaxis, according to the board. Unlike Musk’s previous pay plan, which included significant shareholder value hurdles he had to overcome, all Musk has to do to collect the new award is remain with Tesla as CEO or in a senior executive role for the next two years. He also has to hold the stock until 2030, according to the terms of the award, which will boost his ownership stake from around 13% to 15%.

Brian Dunn, a 40-year compensation practitioner and director of the Institute for Compensation Studies at Cornell University told Fortune Musk’s new award resembles what some experts have referred to as “fog-the-mirror grants.”

“If you’re around and have enough breath left in you to fog the mirror, you get them,” said Dunn. “These don’t have performance targets.”

Technically, the award will be made in restricted shares, but Musk has to pay $23.34 per share to own the stock—the same strike price as his 2018 options. With Tesla’s stock trading at more than $300 a share, the arrangement gives Musk about $280 per share of built-in value, which some comp experts have referred to as “discounted options.”

Larry Cunningham, director of the University of Delaware’s Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance, said that regardless of how the award could be classified for accounting or tax purposes, there’s a simple and accurate description for it. 

“A deep-in-the-money stock option grant, awarded solely for retention,” Cunningham told Fortune in a statement. 

Musk’s pay package has a $26 billion floor

The new package creates what Farient Advisors’ Eric Hoffmann described as a “floor-and-ceiling” arrangement tied directly to the outcome of the ongoing litigation in Delaware, which Tesla has appealed. If courts again wipe out his original 2018 award of 303 million stock options, Musk gets to keep the new 96 million shares, worth about $29 billion at the current stock price. But if any part of the original grant gets reinstated, the new award will shrink accordingly, said Hoffmann. 

“There’s a clause that says ‘no double dipping,’” he said. “But this 96 million share award could be used to make up any of the original grant if he loses in the course of the legal action.” 

Hoffmann said the territory the Tesla board is treading is “unprecedented” in executive compensation. 

“There’s no playbook for this,” said Hoffmann, who analyzed the terms of the award. “They made the first grant, it got overturned by a judge, they made another grant, got it approved by shareholders and then that got held up.”

To level set, a shareholder challenge over Musk’s 2018 pay package led to a landmark opinion in which Musk’s pay was rescinded. The Tesla board then sent the pay plan back to shareholders in 2024 for a say-on-pay vote approval, and shareholders voted in favor of giving Musk the comp. Last December, the same judge—Delaware Court Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick—declined to reverse her previous decision, which Tesla has since appealed.  

In their letter to investors, the board wrote there’s no telling when the court will rule again and described this award as a “first step, ‘good faith’ payment to Elon.”

However, Tesla’s performance in 2025 is a far cry from 2018, when the board first awarded Musk his daring moonshot grant. He followed the award up by multiplying Tesla’s value 12-fold. Its market cap surpassed $1 trillion in October 2021 and again in May 2025. But recently Tesla has struggled. Year-to-date, its share price is down more than 18% and Musk has been active politically, supporting President Donald Trump despite the affiliation turning off Tesla’s climate-focused consumer base, particularly in California

And this time, the board has left little to chance. Tesla erected a significant legal barrier in May that makes a challenge to this award a lot more difficult to mete out. 

After McCormick’s ruling, Tesla shareholders approved a move from being incorporated in Delaware to Texas. In May, Texas amended its business code and Tesla modified its bylaws accordingly a day later. The bylaw amendment created a new threshold so any shareholder who wants to challenge Musk’s pay in court has to hold at least 3% of Tesla’s stock. The value is worth more than $3 billion. 

“The central theme here is that Tesla has moved its jurisdiction of incorporation from Delaware to Texas and as a result the propriety of Tesla’s actions and Musk’s compensation will have to be judged under Texas law, which is more permissive,” wrote Columbia law professor John Coffee in a statement to Fortune. “Tesla may get sued but the odds are more in its favor in Texas.”

Texas followed Tesla’s move by undertaking a campaign to make it a business first state. At this point, it’s unclear how Texas courts would approach a challenge.

“It will be interesting to see whether a Texas court chooses to follow Delaware’s analytical framework—or instead declines to engage in similar judicial scrutiny,” said Cunningham. “The outcome could influence how other companies weigh the relative merits of Delaware versus Texas as a corporate home.”

Investors React to Musk’s comp

Tesla has a veritable army of engaged individual retail investors, and many support Musk and have voted in favor of his comp plan twice now, getting it over the line with more than majority support. 

However, some pension fund leaders who oversee retirees assets invested in Tesla stock have been less than thrilled about Musk’s new award.

“A $29 billion compensation package for any CEO, let alone one who has been largely absent from their daily responsibilities as sales and stock value continue to fall short of investor expectations, is obscene,” said New York City Comptroller Brad Lander in a statement. 

Lander said Tesla’s board is enriching Musk at investors’ expense, “once again.”

Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs told Fortune a $29 billion comp package is “egregious on its face.”

“But in light of Elon Musk’s inattention to the day to day needs of Tesla, and the company’s worse than expected stock value, the package suggests a board out of step with their responsibilities to investors,” Frerichs wrote in a statement. “With revenues falling short of expectations, the board should be less concerned with paying fealty to a greedy CEO than with long-term planning for the success of the company. Shareholders should demand better corporate governance.”

 SOC Investment Group, which represented a group of investors with nearly 8 million shares invested in Tesla, told Fortune in a statement that today’s announcement included a striking admission from the board. “Even an additional $24B in equity might not motivate Elon Musk to stay for two more years, let alone ensure that he devote sufficient time and attention to turn around the currently slumping sales,” SOC wrote. 

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

埃隆·马斯克 特斯拉 CEO薪酬 公司治理 人工智能人才
相关文章