Fears for Musk's future sink Tesla shares

Musk denies wrongdoing and receive's Tesla board's backing

(FILES) In this file photo taken on September 29, 2017 (FILES) In this file photo taken on September 28, 2017 Billionaire entrepreneur and founder of SpaceX Elon Musk speaks at the 68th International Astronautical Congress 2017 in Adelaide. Embattled Tesla chief Elon Musk rejected fraud charges made by securities regulators on September 27, 2018, accusing him of misleading investors over plans to take the electric automaker private."This unjustified action by the SEC leaves me deeply saddened and disappointed," Musk said in a statement."I have always taken action in the best interests of truth, transparency and investors ... and the facts will show I never compromised this in any way."

 / AFP / PETER PARKS
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Shares of Tesla Inc dived 13 per cent on Friday as Wall Street worried a lawsuit from US regulators could force chief executive Elon Musk to step down and make it difficult for the loss-making carmaker to raise more capital.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday accused Musk of fraud and sought to remove him from his role saying he made a series of "false and misleading" tweets about potentially taking the company private.

At least five brokerages who follow Tesla stock said in research notes that they thought Musk might have to resign.

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Several worried that the SEC action was also just the beginning of a legal battle with authorities, short sellers and other investors over Musk's actions that could cost Tesla heavily.

"The SEC civil action may lead to Musk's exit from Tesla (either permanently or temporarily) and the Musk premium in the shares dissipating," Barclays analyst Brian Johnson said.

Musk, 47, is the public face of Tesla, and has driven it to the verge of profitability with a costly ramp-up of production of its Model 3 sedan over the past year.

The Silicon Valley billionaire, who within three weeks of the tweets had abandoned the plan to delist Tesla, said overnight he had done nothing wrong and the company's board reiterated its support for him.

"It will be too damaging to Tesla for him to be removed fully," analyst Ivan Fienseth from Tigress said.

"In order for Tesla to raise money I think investors will want Musk to stay involved but have more controls in place."

Shares were last down 12.4 per cent at $268 (Dh984) in trading before the bell in New York, which would wipe about $7 billion off Tesla's market value.

Gene Munster, managing partner at venture capital firm Loup Ventures, said the lawsuit adds further distraction at a critical 6-month juncture in the company's viability.

"Despite this, we think the company will survive," he said.

The SEC's lawsuit, filed in Manhattan federal court, caps a tumultuous two months set in motion on Aug. 7 when Musk told his more than 22 million Twitter followers that he might take Tesla private at $420 per share, with "funding secured".

The regulator charged that Musk "knew or was reckless in not knowing" that his tweets were false and misleading.

Jeffrey Osborne, an analyst at brokerage Cowen, said investing in Tesla equity and bonds over the past few weeks had been "a game of choose your own adventure".

"The ball is in the Board's court now and it remains to be seen what will happen next," he said.