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Elon Musk Wins Shareholder Approval for Record $1 Trillion Tesla Pay Plan

Elon Musk has secured shareholder approval for a record-breaking $1 trillion Tesla pay package, cementing his grip on the company as he pushes to transform the electric vehicle maker into a global leader in AI and robotics.

The plan received over 75% support during Tesla’s annual shareholder meeting in Austin, Texas, where Musk appeared on stage alongside dancing robots, calling the moment “a whole new book” in Tesla’s story.

The approved package could grant Musk up to $878 billion in stock over the next decade, contingent on ambitious performance milestones — including delivering 20 million vehicles, deploying 1 million robotaxis, and generating $400 billion in core profit. Tesla’s market value would need to climb from $1.5 trillion to $8.5 trillion for Musk to unlock the full payout.

The vote follows months of intense debate over Musk’s compensation and influence. The Tesla board warned that Musk could shift his focus to other ventures — such as SpaceX or his AI startup xAI — if shareholders rejected the plan.

“This isn’t just another chapter,” Musk said to cheering investors. “It’s the start of something entirely new.”

Critics, including Norway’s sovereign wealth fund and proxy advisory firms Glass Lewis and ISS, opposed the plan, citing governance concerns and the risk of excessive power consolidation. Yet supporters argued that tying compensation to Tesla’s market success aligns Musk’s incentives with shareholders’.

Shareholders also voted to invest in xAI, though analysts noted that many abstentions signaled caution over potential conflicts of interest.

The approval clears a major uncertainty clouding Tesla’s future and reinforces Musk’s position as both the visionary and lightning rod behind the company’s AI and robotics ambitions.

BlackRock, Nvidia, and Microsoft lead $40 billion deal for AI data center giant Aligned

A powerful investor group including BlackRock, Microsoft, and Nvidia has agreed to buy Aligned Data Centers, one of the world’s largest data center operators, in a $40 billion deal aimed at securing critical infrastructure for artificial intelligence development.

The acquisition from Macquarie Asset Management marks the first major investment by the AI Infrastructure Partnership, a consortium that also includes Abu Dhabi’s MGX fund and Elon Musk’s startup xAI. The group plans to deploy up to $100 billion in capital, combining equity and debt, to expand global AI infrastructure.

“With this investment in Aligned Data Centers, we further our goal of delivering the infrastructure necessary to power the future of AI,” said Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock and chairman of the partnership.

The move underscores the massive surge in spending by tech giants on computing capacity. Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, and CoreWeave are collectively expected to spend around $400 billion on AI infrastructure this year, according to Morgan Stanley. Meanwhile, OpenAI has inked multibillion-dollar deals with Nvidia, AMD, and Broadcom to secure chip and data capacity worth over $1 trillion.

Founded in 2013, Aligned operates more than 80 data centers across 50 campuses in the U.S. and Latin America, with over 5 gigawatts of operational and planned capacity. The company has been a key beneficiary of the AI infrastructure boom, raising $12 billion in capital earlier this year.

Aligned will remain headquartered in Dallas, Texas, under CEO Andrew Schaap. The deal is expected to close in the first half of 2026.

Elon Musk’s xAI closing in on $20 billion raise backed by Nvidia chips

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence startup, xAI, is nearing a massive $20 billion capital raise tied to Nvidia’s cutting-edge GPU technology, according to Bloomberg News. The report says the financing will combine both equity and debt, with Nvidia investing up to $2 billion as part of the equity tranche.

The funds are linked to Nvidia’s graphics processing units (GPUs), which xAI plans to deploy in its upcoming Colossus 2 data center. The financing structure reportedly includes around $7.5 billion in equity and as much as $12.5 billion in debt, channeled through a special purpose vehicle (SPV) designed to purchase Nvidia chips.

Neither Nvidia nor xAI has commented publicly on the deal. However, the move signals a deepening relationship between the world’s leading AI hardware maker and one of its most ambitious software challengers.

In September, Musk dismissed reports claiming xAI was raising $10 billion at a $200 billion valuation, though he confirmed the company would seek capital “in the coming months.” Founded in July 2023, xAI aims to build an alternative to OpenAI’s ChatGPT, focusing on developing artificial general intelligence systems with tighter integration to Musk’s broader tech ecosystem.