https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/05/tech/samsung-profit-warning-smartphones/index.html
2019-04-05 09:38:00Z
52780260880860
Sherisse Pham contributed to this report.
Tesla chief Elon Musk told reporters outside the Manhattan Federal Courthouse that he was "very happy" over the outcome of the SEC's latest complaint against him. The commission sought to hold him in contempt for violating their previous settlement over a financially relevant tweet, after all, but the judge has merely ordered both parties to resolve their dispute outside of court. "Take a deep breath, put your reasonableness pants on, and work this out," District Judge Alison Nathan said during the hearing.
The SEC brought him to court for the second time after he tweeted a photo of Tesla's facility and followed that up by saying that the automaker will manufacture 500,000 cars in 2019. He corrected himself in another follow-up and clarified that 500,000 is merely the expected production rate. Tesla still expects to deliver 400,000 vehicles for the year, which is consistent with previous guidance. Clearly, his clarification wasn't enough for the SEC.
Tesla made 0 cars in 2011, but will make around 500k in 2019
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 20, 2019
Musk had to step down as Tesla chairman and pay $20 million in penalty the first time the Securities and Exchange Commission filed a lawsuit against him over tweets about taking Tesla private. The agency said his proclamation that the company already has the funding to take the automaker private constitutes fraud for being "false and misleading."
While that lawsuit also sought to ban the executive from serving as an officer of a public company, Musk's deal with the SEC ultimately allowed him to keep his role as Tesla's CEO. Also part of that deal? Having tweets that contain material information about Tesla's vehicle production pre-approved by one of the company's lawyers.
The commission said that by tweeting the 500,000 production outlook for the year, Musk shared "inaccurate and material" data, one that wasn't reviewed by Tesla's lawyers. Musk argued, however, that he had the right to decide whether a post needs pre-approval and that the tweet in question was immaterial to shareholders. He said in a statement provided to Reuters:
"I have great respect for Judge Nathan, and I'm pleased with her decision today. The tweet in question was true, immaterial to shareholders, and in no way a violation of my agreement."
Judge Nathan gave both parties two weeks to hammer out an agreement. If they still don't reach one by that time, then that's when she'll hand down her decision. In case Musk is found in contempt, he might be required to start submitting regular reports about how Tesla's lawyers are overseeing his tweets. SEC lawyer Cheryl Crumpton is also eyeing the possibility of imposing higher fines, seeing as Musk said the $20 million fine he had to pay the first time was "worth it."
Tesla chief Elon Musk told reporters outside the Manhattan Federal Courthouse that he was "very happy" over the outcome of the SEC's latest complaint against him. The commission sought to hold him in contempt for violating their previous settlement over a financially relevant tweet, after all, but the judge has merely ordered both parties to resolve their dispute outside of court. "Take a deep breath, put your reasonableness pants on, and work this out," District Judge Alison Nathan said during the hearing.
The SEC brought him to court for the second time after he tweeted a photo of Tesla's facility and followed that up by saying that the automaker will manufacture 500,000 cars in 2019. He corrected himself in another follow-up and clarified that 500,000 is merely the expected production rate. Tesla still expects to deliver 400,000 vehicles for the year, which is consistent with previous guidance. Clearly, his clarification wasn't enough for the SEC.
Tesla made 0 cars in 2011, but will make around 500k in 2019
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 20, 2019
Musk had to step down as Tesla chairman and pay $20 million in penalty the first time the Securities and Exchange Commission filed a lawsuit against him over tweets about taking Tesla private. The agency said his proclamation that the company already has the funding to take the automaker private constitutes fraud for being "false and misleading."
While that lawsuit also sought to ban the executive from serving as an officer of a public company, Musk's deal with the SEC ultimately allowed him to keep his role as Tesla's CEO. Also part of that deal? Having tweets that contain material information about Tesla's vehicle production pre-approved by one of the company's lawyers.
The commission said that by tweeting the 500,000 production outlook for the year, Musk shared "inaccurate and material" data, one that wasn't reviewed by Tesla's lawyers. Musk argued, however, that he had the right to decide whether a post needs pre-approval and that the tweet in question was immaterial to shareholders. He said in a statement provided to Reuters:
"I have great respect for Judge Nathan, and I'm pleased with her decision today. The tweet in question was true, immaterial to shareholders, and in no way a violation of my agreement."
Judge Nathan gave both parties two weeks to hammer out an agreement. If they still don't reach one by that time, then that's when she'll hand down her decision. In case Musk is found in contempt, he might be required to start submitting regular reports about how Tesla's lawyers are overseeing his tweets. SEC lawyer Cheryl Crumpton is also eyeing the possibility of imposing higher fines, seeing as Musk said the $20 million fine he had to pay the first time was "worth it."
MacKenzie Bezos announced on Twitter on Thursday that she and Jeff Bezos have completed the process of dissolving their marriage, leaving her with $35.6 billion in Amazon stock.
MacKenzie Bezos said she was "happy" to be giving her ex-husband 75 percent of their stock in Amazon along with voting control of her shares. She also relinquished to him all of her interests in The Washington Post and the Blue Origin aerospace company.
The settlement would make her the fourth-richest woman in the world. She ranks behind Francoise Bettencourt Meyers, Alice Walton and Jacqueline Mars, according to Bloomberg.
According to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, MacKenzie Bezos will retain shares representing about 4 percent of Amazon's outstanding common stock, making her the third-biggest shareholder at the company, behind her ex-husband and Vanguard. He remains the richest person in the world, even after losing $35.6 billion in Amazon stock.
Amazon's stock was down about 0.4% Thursday afternoon following the news.
Grateful to have finished the process of dissolving my marriage with Jeff with support from each other and everyone who reached out to us in kindness, and looking forward to next phase as co-parents and friends. Happy to be giving him all of my interests in the Washington Post, Blue Origin, and 75% of our Amazon stock plus voting control of my shares to support his continued contributions with the teams of these incredible companies. Excited about my own plans. Grateful for the past as I look forward to what comes next.
In a separate statement, Jeff Bezos shared his gratitude to his ex-wife.
"I'm grateful for her support and for her kindness in this process and am very much looking forward to our new relationship as friends and co-parents," Bezos said.
Tweet
The announcement clears up some concerns investors had in the days after the couple announced their plans to get a divorce about who would have voting power at Amazon. The Bezoses' split represented a unique situation, according to divorce law experts, since the two were together before Amazon started and before either of them owned such a vast amount of money.
While other founders and CEOs have gotten divorces, most had met their spouses after acquiring their wealth. MacKenzie Bezos, on the other hand, reportedly played a significant role laying Amazon's roots. In an oft-cited origin story, MacKenzie drove the pair from New York to Seattle while Jeff wrote Amazon's business plan. MacKenzie eventually negotiated Amazon's first freight contracts, according to Wired.
Watch: Jeff Bezos keeps control of Amazon in his divorce agreement
After struggling to turn her Tesla on Wednesday, singer Sheryl Crow turned to her nearly 320,000 Twitter followers for assistance. One follower, in particular, rushed in to save the day.
"Help! Who knows what to do when your @Tesla screen goes black and the reset doesn’t work? Return it and get your money back??" asked Crow, revealing that she was stuck in a parking lot at the time.
More than 5,600 fans replied to Crow's tweet and submitted dozens of suggestions — but no one's expertise on the subject compared to Tesla's own CEO Elon Musk.
ELON MUSK'S SECURITY CLEARANCE IS UNDER REVIEW
Musk responded with simple instructions, "Change your screen preference from night mode to auto."
"Night mode with 0% brightness is actually too dark during the day," he added. "This is ultimately our fault. We will update our software so that 0% brightness is always usable relative to ambient conditions."
A Twitter user then pointed out to Musk that a reset should have fixed the problem, however. Musk said he "agreed" that should have been the case.
The 57-year-old country crooner thanked Musk, giving him a thumbs-up for his help.
"Problem solved with that solution after getting to @Tesla. Might I suggest adding some screen controls to the app so that you’re not stuck when the screen goes black?" Crow wrote to Musk.
She later confirmed to her followers that her issue was resolved and thanked everyone for jumping in to offer suggestions.
"LOVED all of your creative responses. Best one was suggesting my kids take a look... which would have been helpful since my kid was the one who changed the settings / caused it to go black in the first place! I knew I should have interrupted school..." replied Crow. "Also, for the haters: I love my @Tesla, and have very few problems. I got the basic model, nothing overly fancy, and it was cheaper than my minivan!"
Nearly 20,000 people liked Musk's advice for Crow, though some questioned if he was only quick to respond because of Crow's fame.
"Only for famous ppl," one fan responded, though a woman then argued that she's seen him "reply and help people, famous or not."
"He can't do that for everyone obviously, he is only human (as far as we know ) but he does it surprisingly a lot," the woman continued.
"Hahahahaha this is AMAZING! Bet you didn’t think Elon was going to respond directly!" another user wrote.
"This is like the peak of customer service," a follower observed.
Musk is currently under fire for allegedly violating an agreement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) when he tweeted about Tesla's vehicle production in February without a lawyer's approval. A federal judge will hear oral arguments Thursday about whether Tesla CEO Elon Musk should be held in contempt of court.
It's unclear if Musk plans to attend the hearing. Musk has said his tweet didn't need pre-approval because it wasn't new information that would be meaningful to investors. His attorneys say the SEC is violating his first amendment rights to free speech.
Tesla's shares are falling 9% in early trading after the company said it churned out 77,100 vehicles in the first quarter, well behind the pace it must sustain to fulfill Musk's pledge to manufacture 500,000 cars annually. As of Wednesday's close, Tesla shares were down 12.3% so far this year.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
After struggling to turn her Tesla on Wednesday, singer Sheryl Crow turned to her nearly 320,000 Twitter followers for assistance. One follower, in particular, rushed in to save the day.
"Help! Who knows what to do when your @Tesla screen goes black and the reset doesn’t work? Return it and get your money back??" asked Crow, revealing that she was stuck in a parking lot at the time.
More than 5,600 fans replied to Crow's tweet and submitted dozens of suggestions — but no one's expertise on the subject compared to Tesla's own CEO Elon Musk.
ELON MUSK'S SECURITY CLEARANCE IS UNDER REVIEW
Musk responded with simple instructions, "Change your screen preference from night mode to auto."
"Night mode with 0% brightness is actually too dark during the day," he added. "This is ultimately our fault. We will update our software so that 0% brightness is always usable relative to ambient conditions."
A Twitter user then pointed out to Musk that a reset should have fixed the problem, however. Musk said he "agreed" that should have been the case.
The 57-year-old country crooner thanked Musk, giving him a thumbs-up for his help.
"Problem solved with that solution after getting to @Tesla. Might I suggest adding some screen controls to the app so that you’re not stuck when the screen goes black?" Crow wrote to Musk.
She later confirmed to her followers that her issue was resolved and thanked everyone for jumping in to offer suggestions.
"LOVED all of your creative responses. Best one was suggesting my kids take a look... which would have been helpful since my kid was the one who changed the settings / caused it to go black in the first place! I knew I should have interrupted school..." replied Crow. "Also, for the haters: I love my @Tesla, and have very few problems. I got the basic model, nothing overly fancy, and it was cheaper than my minivan!"
Nearly 20,000 people liked Musk's advice for Crow, though some questioned if he was only quick to respond because of Crow's fame.
"Only for famous ppl," one fan responded, though a woman then argued that she's seen him "reply and help people, famous or not."
"He can't do that for everyone obviously, he is only human (as far as we know ) but he does it surprisingly a lot," the woman continued.
"Hahahahaha this is AMAZING! Bet you didn’t think Elon was going to respond directly!" another user wrote.
"This is like the peak of customer service," a follower observed.
Musk is currently under fire for allegedly violating an agreement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) when he tweeted about Tesla's vehicle production in February without a lawyer's approval. A federal judge will hear oral arguments Thursday about whether Tesla CEO Elon Musk should be held in contempt of court.
It's unclear if Musk plans to attend the hearing. Musk has said his tweet didn't need pre-approval because it wasn't new information that would be meaningful to investors. His attorneys say the SEC is violating his first amendment rights to free speech.
Tesla's shares are falling 9% in early trading after the company said it churned out 77,100 vehicles in the first quarter, well behind the pace it must sustain to fulfill Musk's pledge to manufacture 500,000 cars annually. As of Wednesday's close, Tesla shares were down 12.3% so far this year.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.