- Loud, Quiet, or Contextual? What European and African Consumer Behaviour Reveals About Status, History and Power
- Property Investment in Uncertain Times: How to Maximise Returns in a Shifting Economy - Eva August, CEO, Century 21
- Railway infrastructure is one of the solutions to Africa’s Trade Expansion - Caroline Trefault, MSC’s Intermodal Africa Manager
- The Precision Transition: Designing Africa’s power systems for reality, not abstraction
- Three weeks of conflict have tested the logic behind a rand-only portfolio - Harry Scherzer, CEO of Future Forex
Elon Musk Says He’ll Pay Over $11 Billion in Taxes This Year
The billionaire may face a tax bill of more than $10 billion for 2021 if he exercises all his options due to expire next year, calculations last week by Bloomberg News showed.
Read more: Elon Musk Faces $10 Billion Tax Bill as He Spars With Warren
The unusually high levy comes after Musk exercised almost 15 million options and sold millions of shares to cover the taxes related to those transactions. That was following a Twitter poll last month when he asked followers whether he should sell 10% of his stake in the electric carmaker, whose shares have rocketed more than 2,300% over the past five years.
Since the unusual move to ask Twitter users about the plan, Tesla has declined nearly a quarter and the company’s market value has slid back below the $1 trillion mark to $937 billion. The shares were 2.7% lower in premarket trading Monday compared with Friday’s close in New York.
A report by ProPublica in June said Musk paid little income tax relative to his outsize wealth. But he’s pushed back against that characterization, saying he doesn’t draw a salary from either SpaceX or Tesla, and pays an effective tax rate of 53% on stock options he exercises. He added that he expects that tax rate to increase next year.
Musk earlier this month said he’ll pay more taxes than any American in history this year. That was in response to another tweet from Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who used Musk’s Time Magazine “Person of the Year” accolade to call him out on his taxes.
