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by adventured
2826 days ago
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> Moreover, he only owns 20% of the company. There's nothing only about owning 20% of a public company. 20% and the largest shareholder, is more than enough to turn any public company inside out. Hedge funds do it all the time with dramatically weaker positions of single digit ownership. Carl Icahn routinely does it with a few percent. It's an immense position in the public markets in terms of wielding power. |
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'Hedge Funds' do this by forming a cabal with other funds and institutional investors.
This is totally unlike Alphabet or Facebook etc. where there is real and direct power.
I don't doubt is shareholders really wanted him gone they could punt Musk.