Tesla CEO Elon Musk in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C. on Friday, May 30, 2025. (Photo: Francis Chung/Politico/Bloomberg/Getty Images)Better late than never. Tesla
announced on Thursday it will hold an annual shareholders meeting on Nov. 6.
The announcement
comes some 24 hours after a letter from more than two dozen investors pressed the electric automaker’s board on when it would next go
mano a mano with its shareholders.
The last annual shareholders meeting was a high-stakes event that saw investors approve CEO Elon Musk’s controversial pay package a second time and green-light a move from Delaware to Texas.
Under Texas law, Tesla is required to hold an annual meeting within 13 months of the last one, which was held on June 13, 2024.
Meanwhile, Tesla has yet to file a proxy statement that would likely answer swirling questions about Musk’s compensation, which would make him the highest-ever paid CEO of a publicly traded company.
(To refresh: An investor challenged the package in court, and a Delaware chancery court judge rescinded it twice, even after Tesla investors approved it a second time last year.)
As it stands, it’s unclear how the Tesla board will proceed with paying Musk—critical for keeping him engaged at Tesla amid his other competing interests, political or otherwise.
—Amanda Gerut