Musk to sell 10% of Tesla stock based on Twitter poll

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Updated 08 November 2021
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Musk to sell 10% of Tesla stock based on Twitter poll

  • In the three months to Nov. 4, company insiders at Tesla sold $259.62 million worth of shares,

Tesla shares slumped about 5 percent in premarket trading after its CEO Elon Musk said he would sell 10 percent of his holdings — about $20 billion worth — in the electric carmaker based on the results of a poll he conducted on Twitter over the weekend.

Musk said he would abide by the results of the poll, which ended with 58 percent of more than 3.5 million votes calling for him to sell the stock. Musk owns about 17 percent of the 1 billion outstanding Tesla shares. If he sold 10 percent of his holdings at their current price of around $1,170 per share, it would net him around $20 billion.

Last week, Tesla shares hit an all-time intraday high of $1,243.49 per share. It is the most valuable carmaker in the world with a market capitalization of more than $1 trillion.

The sometimes abrasive and unpredictable Musk said he proposed selling the stock as some Democrats have been pushing for billionaires to pay taxes when the price of the stocks they hold goes up, even if they don’t sell any shares. It’s a concept called “unrealized gains,” and Musk is sitting on a lot of them with a net worth of roughly $300 billion.

“Much is made lately of unrealized gains being a means of tax avoidance, so I propose selling 10 percent of my Tesla stock,” he tweeted Saturday afternoon. “Do you support this?”

Much of Musk’s wealth is held in shares of Tesla, which does not pay him a cash salary. “I only have stock, thus the only way for me to pay taxes personally is to sell stock,” he tweeted.

Musk, who is known for his sometimes flippant tweets, said he would “abide by the results of this poll.”


Saudi Arabia opens January ‘Sah’ sukuk sale with 4.73% return 

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Saudi Arabia opens January ‘Sah’ sukuk sale with 4.73% return 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia has opened subscriptions for its January issuance of the government-backed “Sah” savings sukuk, offering an annual return of 4.73 percent, up from 4.68 percent in the previous month. 

In a post on X, the Kingdom’s National Debt Management Center said the subscription window opened at 10 a.m. Saudi time on Jan. 4 and will close at 3 p.m. on Jan. 6. 

The latest offering forms part of the NDMC-managed 2026 issuance calendar and reflects Saudi Arabia’s ongoing efforts to promote financial inclusion and encourage personal savings. 

Launched under the Financial Sector Development Program, a key pillar of the Vision 2030 agenda, “Sah” aims to raise the national savings rate to 10 percent by 2030, up from about 6 percent currently. 

The NDMC said the minimum subscription amount for the January offering is SR1,000 ($266.56), while the maximum is capped at SR200,000 per investor. 

The sukuk carries a one-year maturity and offers fixed returns paid at redemption. 

Sukuk are Shariah-compliant financial instruments that grant investors partial ownership in an issuer’s underlying assets, serving as a popular alternative to conventional bonds. 

Subscriptions are available exclusively to Saudi nationals aged 18 and above through approved investment platforms, including SNB Capital, Aljazira Capital and Alinma Investment, as well as SAB Invest and Al-Rajhi Capital. 

Unlike conventional bonds, the sukuk’s returns are structured to comply with Shariah principles. Designed as a secure, low-risk savings instrument, it carries no fees and offers easy redemption, with returns aligned to prevailing market benchmarks. 

Earlier this month, the NDMC announced the successful arrangement of a seven-year syndicated loan amounting to $13 billion, aimed at supporting power, water and public utilities projects. 

Last month, the center revealed it raised SR7.01 billion through its December sukuk issuance. 

The December issuance was divided into five tranches. The first, valued at SR1.23 billion, is set to mature in 2027. The second tranche amounted to SR335 million and will mature in 2029. 

The third tranche was valued at SR1.18 billion and will mature in 2032, while the fourth tranche, worth SR1.69 billion, is set to expire in 2036. 

The fifth tranche was valued at SR2.57 billion and will mature in 2039.