Electric-car maker Tesla (TSLA 1.85%) held a special meeting of stockholders yesterday to vote on the company's proposed compensation package for CEO Elon Musk, which would potentially grant the eccentric billionaire an additional 12% stake in the company over 10 years if he hits all the necessary milestones. The package includes 12 tranches, each good for 1% of current shares outstanding. Tesla's market cap would need to reach a whopping $650 billion for Musk to earn the entire award.

The two largest proxy advisory firms, ISS and Glass Lewis, had both recommended their institutional investors vote against the package, believing that it was excessive and unnecessary given Musk's existing stake in Tesla should serve as sufficient motivation. It seems that recommendation fell on deaf ears, as Tesla shareholders have just approved it by a nearly 3-1 margin.

Front view of new Tesla Roadster

Image source: Tesla.

73% of disinterested votes were in favor

Given the inherent conflicts of interests, Musk and his brother Kimbal Musk recused themselves from the vote. Technically, there were three standards by which to measure the vote: the NASDAQ Standard, Bylaws Standard, and Disinterested Standard.

The NASDAQ Standard was based on the NASDAQ's Stock Market Rules, while the Bylaws Standard was based on Tesla's corporate bylaws. These two standards were effectively the same in practice, but the Disinterested Standard is the important one, as it excludes the Musk brothers due to their recusal.

Standard

For

Against

NASDAQ Standard

96.8 million

23.4 million

Bylaws Standard

96.8 million

23.4 million

Disinterested Standard

63 million

23.4 million

Data source: 8-K.

Under the Disinterested Standard, approximately 73% of votes cast were in favor of the award.

The results of the vote aren't all that surprising, given early indications from prominent institutional investors like Baillie Gifford and T. Rowe Price, both of which publicly voiced support for the proposed package ahead of the meeting. Baillie Gifford and T. Rowe Price are Tesla's largest two institutional shareholders, holding 7.7% and 6.4% of shares outstanding, respectively, according to SEC filings.

Meanwhile, much of Tesla's retail investor base will follow Musk with seemingly limitless patience for the company's missteps and shortcomings, including Model 3 production delays.

About those milestones

With the vote now in the rearview mirror, Musk's task is to deliver on the market cap and operational milestones over the next decade. The market cap milestones come in $50 billion increments, starting at $100 billion with the final milestone at $650 billion. Musk will also need to hit 12 of these 16 operational milestones:

Revenue

Adjusted EBITDA

$20 billion

$1.5 billion

$35 billion

$3 billion

$55 billion

$4.5 billion

$75 billion

$6 billion

$100 billion

$8 billion

$125 billion

$10 billion

$150 billion

$12 billion

$175 billion

$14 billion

Data source: Tesla. All milestones measured on a trailing-12-month basis. EBITDA = earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.

If he is able to deliver, investors will be handsomely rewarded over the next decade, as will Musk himself.