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Thursday, March 28, 2024

JPMorgan Sues Tesla For $162 Million, Accusing Elon Musk Of “Flagrantly” Defaulting On Warrant Payments

Courtesy of ZeroHedge

Late on Monday, JPMorgan sued Tesla for $162.2 million, accusing Elon Musk's electric car company of "flagrantly" breaching a contract related to stock warrants after its share price soared. According to the complaint filed in Manhattan federal court and first reported by Reuters, Tesla in 2014 sold warrants to JPMorgan that would pay off if their "strike price" were below Tesla's share price upon the warrants' expiration in June and July 2021.

JPMorgan, which said it had authority to adjust the strike price, said it substantially reduced the strike price after Musk's Aug. 7, 2018 tweet that he might take Tesla private at $420 per share and had "funding secured," and reversed some of the reduction when Musk abandoned the idea 17 days later.

In either case, Tesla's share price rose approximately 10-fold by the time the warrants expired, and JPMorgan said this required Tesla under its contract to deliver shares of its stock or cash. The bank said Tesla's failure to do that amounted to a default.

"Though JPMorgan's adjustments were appropriate and contractually required," the complaint said, "Tesla has flagrantly ignored its clear contractual obligation to pay JPMorgan in full."

According to the complaint, Tesla sold the warrants to reduce potential stock dilution from a separate convertible bond sale and to lower its federal income taxes (we are confident Bernie Sanders will have something to say about this).  JPMorgan said it had been contractually entitled to adjust the warrants' terms following "significant corporate transactions involving Tesla."

The automaker in February 2019 complained that the bank's adjustments were "an opportunistic attempt to take advantage of changes in volatility in Tesla's stock," but did not challenge the underlying calculations, JPMorgan said. Musk's August 2018 tweets led to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission civil charges and $20 million fines against both him and Tesla.

Meanwhile, TSLA stock continued to slide on Monday, briefly entering a bear market before shooting higher as a result of what we said was a perfectly unmanipulated move in response to Musk selling billions more in TSLA stock.

 

A few hours later it turned out we were right again, when Musk filed a 13G revealing he sold 934,091 shares on Monday and a total of 7.2741 mln shares since Nov 8, accounting for 42.6% of the amount he promised to sell.

 

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