Despite receiving more than 1.06 billion votes in favour, the non-binding proposal for Tesla to invest in xAI did not pass. The motion gained 1.06 billion “for” votes versus 916.3 million “against.” However, more than 473 million abstentions were recorded more than double any other vote on the proxy.
Crucially, under Tesla’s bylaws, abstentions are counted as votes against. That means the high abstention tally effectively turned the vote into a “no”. The company disclosed this outcome in a regulatory filing after the annual shareholder meeting.
While the proposal was purely advisory (non-binding), the result clouded Tesla’s prospects for formally investing in xAI, an AI startup founded by Elon Musk. The company’s general counsel, Brandon Ehrhart, noted the board will “consider next steps in light of the level of shareholder support.”
Elon Musk and Tesla already have connections to xAI: xAI uses Tesla’s hardware ecosystem in some ways (for example, Tesla’s Megapack batteries were reportedly used by xAI), and Tesla has integrated xAI’s chatbot technology (“Grok”) in certain operational contexts.
Earlier, Musk floated the idea of a US$5 billion investment by Tesla into xAI, suggesting he wished the company had already made the move.
An investment by Tesla in xAI would have deepened the convergence of Musk’s portfolio, Tesla, xAI, SpaceX and other ventures in one ecosystem of AI, robotics and energy/transportation. But the shareholder vote indicates the appetite is weaker than Musk might have hoped.
It signals caution among shareholders about committing Tesla’s capital to Musk’s affiliated ventures even when the companies appear strategically adjacent. Tesla’s management now may need to independently evaluate if and how to pursue a stake in xAI without shareholder advisory support.
Given Musk’s ambition to build a tightly integrated “AI + robotics + transportation” platform (with Tesla as a central node), the vote represents a setback. It suggests that shareholders are not yet comfortable with Tesla formalising deeper financial ties to a separate AI startup.
The outcome raises broader corporate-governance questions: how much risk shareholders are willing to take on ventures ancillary to the core business. Tesla’s stated mission centres on electric vehicles, energy storage, transport and robotics; xAI is broader and less anchored to specific deployable hardware. The gap appears to have resonated with investors.
The advisory nature of the vote means Tesla isn’t bound by the outcome but the board indicated it will “examine” options. The key variables going forward:
- Board deliberations: Tesla’s board can decide to revisit a proposal with more detail, tie any investment more directly to Tesla use-cases, or abandon the idea altogether.
- Structure of investment: If revisited, Tesla may structure a smaller or more conditional investment for example, only once xAI proves specific deliverables aligned to Tesla’s roadmap.
- Communication and alignment: Tesla may need to better articulate how an xAI investment concretely advances its vehicle, energy or robotics business, rather than leaving it in the realm of “general AI.”
- Institutional sentiment: Future votes may be influenced by how institutional investors interpret this outcome. Many large investors are increasingly sensitive to cross-venture capital allocation and board independence.
In sum, Tesla shareholders declined to endorse a move for Tesla to invest in xAI even though the “for” votes numerically exceeded the “against.” The decisive factor: the large number of abstentions that defaulted to opposition under Tesla’s bylaws.
The vote underscores shareholder caution at the intersection of transportation/energy hardware companies and more speculative AI startups. For Tesla and Musk, it is a signal: integration of Musk’s broader AI ambitions into Tesla’s capital-deployment strategy is not yet backed unequivocally by the investor base. Whether the board revisits the idea with a more Tesla-centred framing, or distances itself from xAI investment altogether, remains to be seen and will be an important indicator of Tesla’s strategic direction in AI, robotics and transport.




