Tesla Buyers Are Bailing Because of Elon Musk, the ‘Worst Troll’
Elon #Elon
© Provided by CNET Elon Musk has been spending a lot of time on his newest job as CEO of Twitter. That’s affecting Tesla. Getty Images
The last straw for Heather was Elon Musk’s vitriolic attacks on Anthony Fauci, one of the world’s most respected immunologists and the outgoing director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. For Logan, it was when Musk, days after taking over Twitter, ordered employees to stop paying bills to vendors for services they’d already rendered.
For Tom, Musk’s corrosive and erratic leadership of Twitter since he bought the social media site at the end of October was just too much.
And when each of them called to cancel their Tesla car preorders or to terminate their car leases over the past few months, saying Musk’s toxic behavior was the reason, they were told pretty much the same thing from the Tesla salesperson on the other end of the line: “We’re hearing a lot of that.”
For the past two months, Musk, 51, has been managing Twitter as its new owner and CEO, after paying $44 billion to buy the company. Now it seems the toll of his chaotic leadership style, while also splitting his time, is wearing on his other companies. The world’s second-richest person is also CEO of electric car manufacturer Tesla and rocket maker SpaceX.
On Sunday, Musk initiated a poll asking users whether he should step down as CEO of Twitter. When the poll closed early Monday morning, 57% of 17.5 million accounts that voted said he should go. Musk said he would abide by the vote, though as primary owner he’ll still have a say in how the company’s run. He hasn’t said who he’s considering to replace him.
© Provided by CNET After paying $44 billion to buy Twitter, Elon Musk asked users whether he should step down as its leader. Twitter
If Musk’s tenure as CEO may be drawing to an end, it comes after his work over the past couple months was punctuated by his outspoken embrace of extremist right-wing reactionaries, his attacks on former staff from marginalized communities, his spreading of homophobic lies about an attack on the husband of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and his haphazard pronouncements of new policies at one of the world’s most influential communications platforms.
Twitter is no longer a publicly traded company, but Tesla is. And investors there appear unhappy.
Tesla’s shares have plummeted more than 33% since the deal was finalized Oct. 27, with Musk reportedly pulling engineers from projects at the carmaker to help keep the lights on at Twitter after he unceremoniously fired half of Twitter’s employees a week into his takeover. Big name advertisers, who account for nearly 90% of Twitter’s sales, have bailed. Those who’ve spoken publicly say his corrosive behavior, in addition to poorly planned changes to the site that led to a proliferation of fake accounts, are too much.
On Monday, Oppenheimer was among the first major analyst firms to issue a downgrade for Tesla’s stock, CNBC reported, rating it at “perform” from “outperform” before.
The South African entrepreneur has sold nearly $40 billion worth of his Tesla shares to help fund Twitter, even as an estimated $1.2 billion interest payment comes due over the next year. His personal fortune has dropped by about half, to $156 billion, according to Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index, which tracks real-time net worth of the world’s richest people.
© Provided by CNET Elon Musk became the world’s richest man primarily through his work at Tesla. Screenshot by CNET
And the man who loves to create memes and hashtags has become the subject of many, with detractors calling him out with #ElonTheSnowflake, #ElonIsDestroyingTwitter and #ElonMuskIsaGiantTurd. Last week, the Twittersphere dubbed him “Space Karen” for pulling the plug on a Twitter’s Spaces discussion after he failed to answer questions by some of the journalists who he’d banned temporarily from the site after they wrote stories about him he didn’t like.
“His personality is absolutely tanking the Tesla brand,” said Heather, a biotech executive who’s nearing the end of her lease for an extended-range Model S. “I’m looking forward to having an Elon-free existence.”
Heather and other Tesla owners have increasingly been telling family, friends and posting on social media that they no longer want to be associated with him. More than a dozen accounts have tweeted seeming cancellations for Tesla cars in response to the billionaire’s tweets, often to mocking responses from Musk defenders.
Three customers whose lease payments were finishing or were about to take delivery on a car spoke with CNET on the condition of anonymity because they worried that they might be harassed online and, potentially, in real life by the online mobs that endorse Musk and are now emboldened to say whatever they want on his platform. CNET gave them pseudonyms for this story and in one case changed the gender of a Tesla customer because they were so concerned about the possible backlash. They have good reason to be worried.
Yoel Roth, Twitter’s former head of trust and safety, and his family were forced to flee their home for fear of their physical safety, the Washington Post reported, after Musk attacked him in a series of tweets. Musk misrepresented Roth’s academic writing about sexuality and children, which led to a flood of harassment and threats toward the Twitter executive, his family and professors who reviewed his earlier work. (Roth resigned from Twitter after Musk declared himself “chief twit,” making clear he’d be calling the shots rather than deferring to trust and safety teams focused on “principled development.”)
“I’m reluctant to say anything out of line,” said Logan, a Tesla Model 3 lessee from southern California who works in real estate services. He was drawn to Tesla and its battery-powered cars because he didn’t want to support oil companies and also because he really liked the car. “It’s comfortable and it drives great.”
“His personality is absolutely tanking the Tesla brand.”
Heather, Model S owner
But Musk’s behavior since taking over Twitter, including his short-lived defense of rapper Kanye West’s antisemitic comments disparaging Jews and praising Nazi leader Adolph Hitler, was too much.
“I don’t want to support a company or anyone who acts that way,” Logan said.
Tom, a former Tesla investor who owned a car and had put down a deposit with SpaceX’s Starlink satellite internet service, said he’s walking away from endeavors by Musk’s companies altogether.
Once impressed with Musk and his businesses, Tom now says of Musk that he’s “the worst troll in my feed.”
“If he wants to be CEO of social media company, he should really focus on that and let this other company go,” Tom added. “If he stepped down from Tesla, I would definitely reconsider keeping the car.”
© Provided by CNET Elon Musk carried a sink when he arrived at Twitter’s San Francisco headquarters the day before his takeover. His accompanying tweet said, “Let that sink in.” Elon Musk / Getty Images Call and response
These Tesla owners aren’t alone. A poll by YouGov found that opinions about Tesla among car buyers have radically shifted in the past two months. The company had a net-positive score of 5.9% at the beginning of this year, peaking at 6.7% in May. But in November, it fell to a negative 1.4% reading last month, The Wall Street Journal reported, and that was before Musk tweeted his attack on Fauci. Morning Consult found more people hold a similarly negative view of Tesla than at the start of the year.
Tesla is still the most widely used electric car brand in the US, according to S&P Global Mobility, which tracks automotive industry data. Two years ago, it represented 79% of electric vehicles registered in the US. But that number’s dropped to 65% so far this year, as major competitors including GM, Ford, Hyundai and Toyota expand their EV offerings. By 2025, S&P Global Mobility expects Tesla’s share of the EV market to plummet to below 20%.
“I don’t want to support a company or anyone who acts that way.”
Logan, Model 3 owner
For his part, Musk in October told analysts on a financial earnings conference call that he tracked “excellent demand” for the holiday shopping season. He said he expected to “sell every car that we make for as far into the future as we can see.” Those comments were made a week before he took over as Twitter’s CEO.
But Tesla sales staff suggest a different story. When Logan called to cancel his order on a new car at the end of his lease early next year, Tesla staff offered him nearly $4,000 to keep the order. The company’s entry-level Model 3 sedan starts at $46,990, not including tax incentives and other savings. Prices go up to more than $162,940 for a Model X SUV.
Tesla appended a note to its website in December with an offer, similar to Logan’s, of $3,750 off the sticker price and 10,000 miles of free Supercharging to anyone willing to take delivery of a new Model 3 or Model Y crossover before the end of the year.
© Provided by CNET Elon Musk has said he wants to allow people to post all tweets that don’t break the law. Twitter
Heather, the biotech executive who’s a fan of muscle cars, said she got a call from Tesla around the time Musk took over Twitter, asking if she planned to keep her lease on her Model S or trade it in. When she said Musk’s behavior had turned her away, the staff tried to distance themselves from their CEO, saying he doesn’t represent the whole company.
When sales staff called again, Heather told them it’s only gotten worse. Once a regular Twitter user, Heather’s decided to move to competing social network Post. “I don’t know what’s happened to him,” she said, asking why the Tesla’s board of directors is allowing his behavior.
Tesla, which doesn’t have a PR department, didn’t respond to a request for comment, nor did its board of directors. Twitter, which also no longer appears to have a PR team, didn’t respond to request for comment. Musk, who tweets many times each day, didn’t respond to requests for comment either.
© Provided by CNET Musk has said if he can’t turn Twitter around, it may need to declare bankruptcy. James Martin/CNET Getting out
Tesla owners aren’t the only people upset about Musk’s behavior. A chorus of analysts and investors on Wall Street have been raising alarms since Musk announced his plans to take over Twitter last April.
Tesla’s third-largest individual shareholder, Indonesian billionaire KoGuan Leo, tweeted last week that he believed Musk had abandoned the electric car company. “Tesla needs and deserves to have working full time CEO,” he wrote, comparing Musk to Apple CEO Tim Cook, who’s helped build the iPhone maker into the titan of industry it is today. “An executioner, Tim Cook-like is needed, not Elon.”
When Tesla investor and Motley Fool writer Brian Feroldi tweeted at Musk that shareholders were “concerned that Twitter is consuming too much of your time,” Musk defended himself saying he’d “literally just finished” a meeting about Tesla production progress in Texas.
Many investors were not convinced. Tesla’s stock has fallen more than 60% so far this year, with the biggest dips coming after Musk announced his Twitter takeover plans and again when he became CEO. And though Musk himself publicly said in April that he didn’t plan to sell any more Tesla share sales, he did just that throughout the year, netting near $40 billion. That includes another quiet share sale in mid-December of about $3.6 billion, according to financial filings.
Musk’s behavior hasn’t just soured investors and customers. They’ve also hit his fans. Tom, the former Tesla investor who owned a car and reserved a spot with SpaceX’s Starlink satellite internet service, said he plans to buy an alternative electric vehicle when his lease expires next year.
“He was someone to look up to,” Tom said. “Now, I would rather pay more money to be with a different company.”