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This Article is From Aug 28, 2018

Tesla Holders Brace for Market’s Verdict on Musk’s Brazen Pivot

(Bloomberg) -- Elon Musk's stunning tweet that he wanted to take Tesla Inc. private and had funding secured was a classic Musk moonshot -- given credibility only by the sense that if anyone could possibly pull such a brazen feat, he was the guy.

The initial scoffing after that Aug. 7 post gave way to hiring of bankers to a board meeting where, just maybe, it was ready to take shape. Then Musk aborted his own mission, when hastily assembled bankers and advisers had barely started work, according to people familiar with the matter. Musk was perhaps spooked by blow back from investors he was sure would support him, including key backers from Saudi Arabia, according to other people.

Investors now must brace for another potential wild ride when U.S. trading opens Monday, while regulators and lawyers autopsy what happened to a deal potentially valued at $82 billion and Tesla's board is left with a brilliant but exhausted and erratic chief executive officer. The shares fell 4.3 percent to $308.87 at 5:10 a.m. New York time before U.S. exchanges opened. The stock, always volatile, has traded as high as $387 and as low as $288 since Aug. 7, far short of the $420 a share cash-out price Musk pitched.

“We expect shares to be under pressure in the near term as investors question the go-private process and the outcome of staying public,” Ben Kallo, an analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co., wrote in a report. Kallo recommends buying the stock, saying it will rebound to above $400 as the company shows progress in increasing output of Model 3 vehicles.

Musk, Tesla's billionaire CEO, said Friday in a blog post that most shareholders wanted Tesla to remain public. Large institutional shareholders had limits on how much they could invest in a private company, and there was no proven path for most retail investors, who are among his most ardent and adoring fans. “The sentiment, in a nutshell, was ‘please don't do this,'” Musk wrote.

Plan's Downfall

The unfolding story suggests Musk was sorely mistaken when he tweeted “funding secured” and later told the world “investor support is confirmed,” based on his belief that Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund was eager to back his venture. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is now investigating his tweets and blog posts, which triggered the stock gyrations throughout August.

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