That turned out to be arguably the most costly tweet of all time. Not only did Musk and Tesla each have to pay $20 million in civil penalties, but the SEC’s security fraud settlement also demanded that he step down as the company’s chairman for at least three years.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) August 7, 2018 In an apparent response to being punished for cracking wise about high-powered business shit, Musk quickly notified the SEC that he’d be soon purchase an equivalent $20 million worth of company stock directly from Tesla. He actually followed through — and then some. Since settling with the SEC, Tesla’s founder has bought a gut-busting $45 million worth of Tesla shares split across three trades: $10 million for $334.98 per share in October 2018; $25 million for $243 per share in May 2019; and another $10 million for $767 per share on Valentine’s day this year. [Read: Tom Nook is richer than Jeff Bezos — but does this raccoon deserve all that wealth?] As it turns out, Musk has paid a touch under $45 million for 145,761 Tesla shares since the 420-fiasco. If sold today (when its price was $705.63), those shares would be worth nearly $103 million, earning in excess of $57.8 million. Indeed, Musk could effectively use those shares to pay both his and Tesla’s $20 million civil penalties and still be up almost $18 million.
Musk is worth so many billions that a few million won’t matter
It’s realistic that Musk really doesn’t care about the fine. The SEC’s $20 million infringement was equal to 0.1% of Musk’s wealth, not to mention he’s sitting on $24 billion in Tesla stock in total. The SEC forcing Musk to give up the position of Tesla’s chairman is likely to have hurt him more. Not long after settling, Musk tweeted that Tesla would retire the board chairman position sometime in 2021. And considering how chipper Musk seems about SpaceX’s recent Starlink success, I’m sure he’s totally over it.