Key Takeaways
Tesla floated a new compensation package for Elon Musk potentially worth $1 trillion.In order for Musk to collect the full amount, Tesla’s market cap would have to rise to $8.5 trillion and certain operational milestones would need to be achieved.The package is aimed at retaining Musk, who has threatened to leave the company in previous negotiations unless certain assurances were made.

Trillions are the new billions.

Electric-vehicle company Tesla (TSLA) on Friday unveiled a proposed compensation package for Elon Musk that could grow to roughly $1 trillion if the CEO hits performance targets and collects all of the shares awarded. Between the new plan and shares he owns now, the estimated value of Musk’s implied total stake in Tesla would exceed $2 trillion, cementing his status as the world’s wealthiest human.

Musk has to hit what the company called “Mars-shot milestones”—longer than a moonshot, to be sure—to be compensated in full, according to a company filing. In addition to market-cap milestones attached to the plan’s share-award tranches, the company would have to meet operational milestones that start with product delivery targets and end with adjusted Ebitda hurdles.

The first pair of milestones requires Tesla’s market capitalization to reach and sustain $2 trillion and the company to deliver a cumulative total of 20 million vehicles.

Market-cap targets jump by $500 billion with every tranche, with the last target being $8.5 trillion—more than double the current market cap of Nvidia (NVDA), the most valuable company in the world. Operational milestones include 1 million robotaxis in commercial operation as well as logging $400 billion in adjusted Ebitda over four consecutive quarters.

The last two of the 12 tranche awards would only be granted after Musk sets a succession plan approved by Tesla. And he would have to stay at the company for at least 7 1/2 years.

Tesla Committee Says the Cost ‘Is Well Worth It’

The plan, on which shareholders are scheduled to vote Nov. 6, could stir up drama if shareholder reactions are anything like receptions to past pay packages. In 2018, a group of Tesla investors balked when shareholders approved a 10-year performance-based pay plan that would award Musk a then-estimated $56 billion. A Delaware judge struck down the deal twice, and Tesla’s board recently approved an interim stock award of 96 million shares of restricted stock. If Musk is awarded the original 2018 package, the interim award would be forfeited.

In order for Musk to own his earned awards outlined in the 2025 pay package, he has to pay the equivalent of Tesla’s closing price on Sept. 3, or roughly $334 per share in cash or stock, after he hits the 7 1/2-year mark, at the earliest, or after 10 years.

During negotiations that stretched across 10 meetings, Musk threatened to “pursue his other interests” and leave Tesla if he wasn’t assured he’d be compensated for his past services as outlined under the 2018 pay package and at least a 25% voting interest, according to the proxy filing, up from about 20% now.

“The Committee believes the cost to Tesla and its shareholders is well worth it in light of the tremendous value that would be created, and strides in product development that would be realized, if the 2025 CEO Performance Award is fully achieved,” Tesla’s filing said.

For now, investors appear pleased. Tesla shares rose almost 3% as of Friday afternoon to a recent $348.