*By Carlo Versano* Tesla shares sank 3 percent in early trading Monday, following CEO Elon Musk's [announcement](https://www.tesla.com/blog/STAying-public) over the weekend that he is abandoning his controversial plan to take the company private. The reversal capped 16 days of panic inside Tesla to see whether the idea, put forth in a tweet earlier this month, was viable. It finally became clear, by Musk's own admission, that it was not. In the blog post, published without the fanfare of his earlier tweets, Musk said it had become clear to him that, while "there was more than enough funding" to take Tesla private, doing so would estrange many of the company's existing shareholders (and most ardent supporters of the company). It was reported that Musk also became wary of the strings attached to taking cash from the Saudi sovereign wealth fund, which he said expressed both the interest and ability to fund his buyout. Musk also said the company "absolutely must stay focused on ramping Model 3 and becoming profitable." Advancing such a huge, complex buyout of public shareholders ー one Musk originally valued at $72 billion ー would take resources away from that effort. While the will-he-won't-he drama that had captivated Wall Street and Silicon Valley for the last three weeks seems to have come to an end, Musk may not be out from under the thumb of regulators yet. The SEC began a formal inquiry into what Musk meant when he tweeted that he had "secured funding" for a buyout and whether that constituted securities fraud. That investigation is reportedly still underway, even without a go-private deal on the horizon.

Share:
More In Business
ChatGPT-Related Scams on the Rise
Meta is warning that cybercriminals are tricking people into downloading programs that can steal valuable information on fake ChatGPT offers. Cheddar News explains how Meta has observed hundreds of malicious links on its platform.
Analyst Breaks Down Market as Fed Raises Rates
Will McDonough, founder and CEO of EMG Advisors, joined Cheddar News to discuss Wednesday's trading session after the Federal Reserve raised rates by 0.25% as tighter credit conditions continue to affect small- and medium-sized businesses.
Strategies for Options Traders
Cheddar News' Courtney Sturgeon reports from the Cboe floor with Alan Knuckman, Chief Market Strategist at Bulls Eye Option, to discuss strategies for options traders ahead of a busy trading week amid earnings, the FOMC meeting, and more.
Load More