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Tesla has lost more than $200 billion in market value since Elon Musk’s Twitter poll—costing him 15% of his fortune so far

The stock is down again in Wednesday's pre-market trading.

13 August 2021, Brandenburg, Grünheide: Elon Musk, Tesla CEO, stands at a press event on the grounds of the Tesla Gigafactory.

Tesla’s big stock slide is continuing in the wake of CEO Elon Musk’s recent Twitter poll on whether he should sell 10% of his holdings to pay more taxes (yes he should, his followers advised).

The electric-car maker’s shares were down 1.4% at the start of trading Wednesday, with the drop quickly deepening to 3% before recovering somewhat. That came after a horrendous Tuesday, in which they lost 12% of their value, following a 4.8% drop on Monday. The now barely trillion-dollar company is down more than $200 billion over that span—though it’s still up 156% over the past year.

Musk said he would abide by his Twitter followers’ recommendation for a share sale. However, there is as yet no public record of him informing the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) about a potential sale. Musk’s brother, Kimbal, sold $109 million worth of his Tesla stock just before the CEO’s Twitter poll, records show.

As part of a 2019 settlement between Musk and the agency—struck to end a securities-fraud probe—he promised to have a Tesla lawyer preapprove his market-moving public statements. Earlier this year, the SEC admonished Musk over a tweet saying “Tesla’s stock price is too high imo,” but his lawyers reportedly retorted that the agreement doesn’t cover statements about the firm’s share price.

Musk’s personal wealth has taken a significant hit this week, dropping around 15% to $288 billion (though again, Tesla’s otherwise stellar stock-price performance over the past 12 months has still boosted Musk’s fortune by around 70%).

The Big Short investor Michael Burry theorized this week that Musk needed to sell the shares to pay back personal loans, for which a sizable chunk of his Tesla shares serve as collateral. Another possible reason he needs the cash: a 10-year window on cheap share options is about to close.  

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