
Elon musk floats tesla sell-off: asks if he should flog 10% of stock
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The billionaire entrepreneur posted: "Much is made lately of unrealized gains being a means of tax avoidance. So I propose selling 10% of my Tesla stock.” He added: "I will abide
by the results of this poll, whichever way it goes", before cryptically adding "Abide(n)", in an apparent reference to US President Joe Biden. He then said: "Note, I do
not take a cash salary or bonus from anywhere. "I only have stock, thus the only way for me to pay taxes personally is to sell stock." In a stark illustration of Musk's
worldwide reach, within 40 minutes of the poll going live, 473,000 people had voted. In addition, thousands piled in with comments about the idea. Tom Wohlfarth said: "No, I do not
support you selling 10 percent of your Tesla stock because your decision to sell Tesla should not be driven by some harebrained agenda of people who don’t understand or appreciate basic
concepts of tax & finance or how capitalism works." Asha Jadeja Motwani argued: "Elon please HOLD. The planet need you to take those incredible risks that you were planning to
take and what you have already accomplished. "Taxes go in the hands of the government which is a black hole." JUST IN: MACRON'S BREXIT WAR SPECTACULARLY BACKFIRES - ARTICLE 16
LOOMS The announcement triggered a meteoric rally in the carmaker's stock - helping the company surpass $1 trillion in market value. However, Tesla boss Elon Musk took to Twitter on
Monday to say that his company had not signed a contract with Hertz, spurring a brief halt in Tesla's stock rally. In response to Musk's comments, Hertz said in a statement that
the deliveries of the Teslas had already started. The statement, issued on Tuesday, said: "We are seeing very strong early demand for Teslas in our rental fleet, which reflects market
demand for Tesla vehicles." The company has already started advertising its Tesla fleet on websites and in a series of YouTube commercials featuring National Football League (NFL)
quarterback Tom Brady. Shares of Tesla, which were up 2.3 percent at $1,242 in premarket trading, have rallied adding about $350 billion to its market value since October 20, when it
reported robust third-quarter results. South Africa-born Musk, 50, was the world's richest man as of this month, with a net worth of more than $320billion. From the early 2000s until
2020, Musk lived in California, where Tesla and SpaceX have their headquaters. However, he moved to Texas, declaring that the Golden State was "complacent" with its economic
success. During an appearance on US comedy programme Saturday Night Live, which he also hosted, Musk claimed to have Aspergers Syndrome.