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Tesla shares fall as Musk says company's stock is overvalued

May 2, 2020

The share price of the US electric-car maker nosedived by around 10% at the end of the trading day after Tesla's CEO tweeted that the company's price was "too high." Elon Musk is also critical of the COVID-19 lockdown.

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Elon Musk
Image: Getty Images/W. McNamee

Elon Musk's tweet on Friday wiped off $14 billion (€12.8 billion) of Tesla's market value and some $3 billion from Musk's own stake in Tesla. The company's shares closed at $701.32 at the end of the trading day on May 1.

"Tesla stock price is too high imo [in my opinion]," Musk said on Twitter.

Musk's tweets have in the past landed him in trouble with US regulators, with one case still ongoing.

In August 2018, Musk tweeted that he was taking Tesla private at $420 per share, sending investors into frenzy. He also claimed to have secured funding to move ahead with his plan.

Read more: Tesla wins court approval to build Gigafactory by clearing forest in Germany

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the US securities regulator, filed a fraud charge against Musk for disrupting the market with his tweet. The SEC alleged that Musk was aware that the potential transaction was "uncertain."

Musk settled the charge by stepping down as Tesla's chairman and agreeing to pay a penalty.

Read more: Elon Musk cleared of defamation for 'pedo guy' tweet

Dissatisfied with lockdown restrictions

In other recent tweets, Musk slammed the ongoing lockdown in the US to slow the spread of COVID-19. "Now give people back their freedom," Musk said, expressing his continued dissatisfaction with the restrictions imposed on businesses following the outbreak of the novel coronavirus.

Tesla's plant in Fremont, California, has been closed since the last week of March.

On April 29, during Tesla's first-quarter earnings call, Musk said the US government's stay-at-home order "forcibly imprisoned people in their homes against all their constitutional rights."

Read more: Tesla's stock hits record high following report of Chinese loan

Are self-driving cars really ready to go?

am/shs (AFP, dpa)

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