Watch CBS News

Elon Musk isn't backing down despite weird remarks in Tesla call

Tesla CEO Elon Musk under fire
Tesla CEO Elon Musk defends company in combative earnings call 05:07

If Elon Musk has any regrets about dissing some pesky stock analysts in a call this week to discuss Tesla's latest earnings, it's not showing up in his Twitter feed.

The quirky entrepreneur took to social media on Friday to defend his combative performance, in which he rebuked analysts for asking "boring, bonehead" questions about the electric car maker. Tesla shares sank during the unusual post-earnings call, taking billions off the company's market value.

Despite a slew of headlines highlighting his unusual remarks, which strayed from the usual generally civil exchanges between corporate executives and investment pros, Musk is doubling down. On Twitter, he alluded to Wall Street analysts he claims are "trying to justify their Tesla short thesis," a reference to investors who bet against a company's stock.

Both analysts snubbed by Musk -- RBC Capital Markets' Joseph Spak and Bernstein's Toni Sacconaghi -- have a "hold" or equivalent rating on Tesla shares, rather than a "sell" rating.

During Wednesday's call, Spak asked about customer reservations for the Model 3 sedan, while Sacconaghi wanted to know about Tesla's capital requirements. Tesla has burned through billions in cash as it battles to hit production targets for the Model 3, the vehicle the company is counting on to crack the broader auto market.

The questions were "neither valid nor pertinent," Musk tweeted, urging people to ignore the thread unless they were interested in "a tedious discussion about Tesla stock."

Sacconaghi fired back at Musk Thursday, telling CNBC: "This is a financial analyst call, this is not a TED talk."

Musk got a warmer reception among his Twitter base, with one fan defending him as one who "cares more about the world and making it a clean place without help from corrupt Wall Street."

Wall Street weighed in by putting a halt to its recent hammering of Tesla -- its shares rose nearly 4 percent in afternoon trade. 

The exchange with analysts wasn't Musk's only display of testiness of late. He also recently hung up on Washington's top transportation accident investigator, Bloomberg News reports. The phone call occurred when the National Transportation Safety Board chair called to reprimand Musk for blog posts about a fatal Tesla crash still under investigation by the NTSB.

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.