- Tesla shares soared 22% on Thursday, lifting Elon Musk's net worth by roughly $26 billion.
- Musk is now worth almost $270 billion, according to Forbes, putting him about $58 billion ahead of his good friend and former Tesla board member Larry Ellison.
- Tesla had its second-best day ever on the stock market following an earnings beat and an uplifting projection for 2025 growth.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk, already the world's richest person, added another $26 billion in paper wealth on Thursday after his company's stock had its biggest rally since 2013.
Musk is now worth about $269 billion, according to Forbes, putting him more than $50 billion ahead of good friend and former Tesla board member Larry Ellison, who remains the largest shareholder in Oracle.
Musk controls close to 13% of Tesla's outstanding shares, accounting for the bulk of his net worth, though he also owns a big chunk of SpaceX, which is valued on the private markets at over $200 billion. Additionally, he's the controlling owner of X, formerly Twitter, and artificial intelligence startup xAI.
Musk's wealth could be even higher depending on the outcome of a shareholder lawsuit surrounding his 2018 pay package that's winding its way through court.
The pop on Thursday followed Tesla's better-than-expected earnings report late Wednesday and Musk's comments on the call suggesting that "vehicle growth" will be 20% to 30% next year. Tesla shares soared 22% at the close, their second-biggest gain since the company's IPO in 2010.
Prior to the earnings announcement, Tesla shares had been slumping and were headed for their worst month since January. But the stock erased its loss for the year and is now up 5% in 2024, compared to the Nasdaq's 23% gain.
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Tesla reported earnings per share of 72 cents, topping the average analyst estimate of 58 cents. Profit was boosted by $739 million in revenue for environmental regulatory credits and $326 million in revenue from FSD, the company's Full Self-Driving Supervised system.
Musk spent much of the earnings call touting what he promises will be Tesla's autonomous future, including a ride-hailing service that he says will open to the public as early as next year in Texas and California. Two weeks earlier, Tesla held its long-awaited robotaxi event, showcasing the concept of its Cybercab.
However, while Alphabet's Waymo has been operating a commercial driverless service to the public since June, Tesla has consistently missed its own projections for getting a product to market. The company still doesn't produce or sell cars that are safe to use without a human at the wheel, ready to steer or brake at all times.
And while Musk unveiled both a heavy-duty Semi truck and a Roadster refresh in 2017, the Roadster design is still not finalized, and the company is only in "pilot production" with the Semi.
One topic Musk didn't address on Wednesday's call was his campaigning and hefty spending in support of Donald Trump.
Since publicly endorsing Trump shortly after the first assassination attempt on the former president in July, Musk has stepped up his rhetoric, most notably on X, and has contributed tens of millions of dollars to a political action committee that's supporting the Republican nominee.
Musk has been campaigning in the critical swing state of Pennsylvania, which he's called the "linchpin" in this election. Over the weekend, he said he would randomly award $1 million a day to registered voters who sign a petition for his pro-Trump PAC in an effort to get his fans in battleground states to the polls.
The U.S. Department of Justice has warned the PAC that Musk's voter sweepstakes may violate federal election law, a source familiar with the matter told NBC News on Wednesday.
Ahead of the earnings call, many investors had questions about Musk's political activities.
"Elon Musk has the right to express his political views, but his public activism seems at odds with his responsibility as CEO to protect shareholder value," an anonymous retail investor wrote on a forum that Tesla uses to solicit investor questions. "How does Tesla address this, and can it confirm Musk's actions are not harming sales or growth?"
The comment had received 168 upvotes prior to the call. Another question, which had received 527 upvotes, asked if Tesla's board is doing anything to ensure Musk's "political engagement doesn't detract from Tesla's core mission and protects shareholder value and brand integrity."
In a post on X earlier this week, Musk wrote, "I think this election is existential to the United States."
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