A federal judge in San Francisco dismissed a securities fraud lawsuit in which Tesla shareholders accused the electric car company and chief executive Elon Musk of misleading them about the progress of production of its Model 3 vehicle.
US district judge Charles Breyer said that while shareholders claimed that Tesla fell short of its production goals, “federal securities laws do not punish companies for failing to achieve their targets”.
Judge Breyer said the shareholders have until September 28th to amend their complaint. Their lawyer, Laurence Rosen, did not respond to a request for comment.
The case is separate from lawsuits accusing Tesla and Mr Musk of scheming to hurt short-sellers through Musk’s August 7th tweets about taking the Palo Alto, California-based company private, and that funding had been “secured.”
Musk abandoned that proposal late last Friday night.
Tesla formally launched the Model 3 in July, 2017, touting it as a vehicle for the masses, and attracted deposits from more than 500,000 potential customers.
But shareholders said Mr Musk knew Tesla was “woefully unprepared” to meet its production goal of 5,000 Model 3s per week, and that Tesla’s share price was inflated until after the company finally cut its production target last November.
Belief in the Model 3 had helped propel Tesla’s share price 62 per cent higher since the Palo Alto, California-based company unveiled it in March 2016.
But the judge said shareholders failed to show that Tesla needed to be clearer that Model 3 production could fall short.
The company eventually blamed its production shortfall on “bottlenecks” at its battery factory outside Reno, Nevada and its assembly plant in Fremont, California.
“Plaintiffs are correct that defendants’ qualifications would not have been meaningful if defendants had known that it was impossible for Tesla to meet its stated production goals, not merely highly unlikely,” judge Breyer wrote. “The facts plaintiffs have put forth do not tend to establish that this was the case.”
- Bloomberg