Tesla CEO Elon Musk laughing Kirsty Wigglesworth/Pool via REUTERS
Musk’s previous $56 billion pay package was blocked by a Delaware judge.
Tesla and other companies left Delaware. The state freaked out and relaxed its corporate code.
Texas and Nevada followed suit. Now it’s even easier for companies to pay huge exec compensation.
There are some hard lessons to take from Tesla’s stunning new $1 trillion pay plan for Elon Musk.
I’m not here to judge whether this compensation proposal is good or bad, or too high or too low.
Tesla shareholders will decide that in November.
As a journalist, my job is to report what happens and try to explain why, clearly and fairly.
My conclusion is that it would probably have been better not to have meddled with Musk’s previous pay package from 2018.
At the time, that original compensation plan was designed to pay Musk as much as $56 billion, but only if Tesla hit a series of performance targets that were considered wildly unobtainable back then.
Shareholders signed off, along with Tesla’s board.
By 2024, Tesla had hit these almost impossible goals, and the spoils began flowing to Musk.
But then, a shareholder sued and a judge in Delaware, where Tesla was incorporated, ruled against the pay package.
She questioned the independence of Tesla’s board, saying Musk wielded too much control over the process of approving the $56 billion plan. The judge won. It was an impressive victory.
What happened after that? Tesla, Dropbox, and other companies left Delaware.
Tesla moved to Texas, which worked hard to carve out a more friendly jurisdiction for corporations.
Nevada did a similar thing. Dropbox incorporated there. Even Meta considered leaving Delaware.
This undermined Delaware’s unique, multi-decade pitch that it is a friendly place to incorporate companies.
Concerns began to grow that the state would lose revenue from the taxes many corporations pay there.
“An exodus of corporations could have dire consequences for Delaware,” a Fordham Law School journal warned earlier this year.
“The state derives a substantial portion of its revenue from incorporation fees and franchise taxes.”
One corporate attorney focused on these issues told me that Delaware was tearing itself apart earlier this year as some residents worried they would see their tax bills rise to make up the shortfall.
To prevent this dire outcome, Delaware passed a law that radically changed the corporate code in the state.
One major firm called it “the most impactful changes to Delaware corporate law in decades.”
The changes made it much easier for companies to get their executive compensation packages approved by directors and passed by shareholders.
New protections made it harder for disgruntled investors to sue and demand internal documents and other evidence from companies.
This compounded what Texas and Nevada were already doing to make it easier for companies, such as Tesla, to pay whatever they and shareholders think is best in terms of executive compensation.
The end result of all this: It’s now even easier for public companies to pay executives massive compensation.
The best example is Musk’s huge new pay package.
With Tesla incorporated in Texas now, it’s unlikely this plan will be challenged.
News
A newly surfaced inventory from Jeffrey Epstein’s “secret” storage unit reads like a missing chapter—items reportedly removed ahead of a 2005 raid, then locked away outside official view. The most unsettling claim: authorities may never have searched it. One line in the file changes how everything else reads|KF
More disturbing details were coming to light about the secret storage lockers tied to Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier once…
My parents didn’t leave an explanation—only a note: “Stay out of sight, freak.” I thought it was the usual cruelty, until a lawyer knocked with a folder and a deadline. One signature, one hidden clause, and I realized the insult wasn’t the point—it was the cover…(KF)
Sierra Merritt’s story begins on her 16th birthday, April 12th, in the quiet, hollow silence of her family’s Westport home….
THE EPSTEIN FILES OPEN AGAIN: 17 DIRTY EMAILS EXPOSED IN A MAJOR EPSTEIN DOCUMENT LEAK, FORCING THE PUBLIC TO CONFRONT QUESTIONS THAT HAVE NEVER BEEN ANSWERED|KF
The release of millions of pages of investigative material related to Jeffrey Epstein has reopened one of the darkest chapters…
WHAT POLICE FOUND BEHIND THE FOSTER HOME DOOR SHOCKED EVEN VETERAN OFFICERS: CHAINS, CONTROL, AND CHILDREN LIVING IN FEAR — ALL REVEALED BY A SINGLE BODYCAM RECORDING||case file (KF)
The New Mexico State Police arrived at the remote cabin just after nightfall. Dispatch radio traffic crackled as officers moved…
A horrifying case in abandoned mine shafts: a borrowed propane tank, a hidden rifle, tire tracks, and a homemade device later recovered—moves so calculated they left even investigators chilled, all tied to the Marine next door | case file (KF)
Aaron Corwin was born on July 15, 1994, in the United States to biological parents who were never publicly identified….
The troubling past of the #1 suspect in the Nancy Guthrie case: the “last person to see her” detail is pushing the investigation into a new direction as records, timing, and movements are re-examined. No public accusation—just mounting pressure, and a background that has investigators uneasy|KF
The investigation into the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of Today Show host Savannah Guthrie, has taken an…
End of content
No more pages to load






