Elon Musk said he runs his companies with great difficulty. “
- Elon Musk said that his business administration was closely working with the White House was not easy.
- Tesla share 15 % on Monday, with some investors.
- Musk said he wanted to make the government “more efficient” and “eliminating waste and fraud.”
On Monday, who runs his work, such as Tesla and Spacex, while making a major government reform voltage was not easy.
During an interview with Fox Business on Monday, Musk asked host Larry Kudlo how to run his other works closely with the White House Trump.
“With great difficulty,” Mouc said, followed by a long stop and signing but not much more.
Musk added: “I just try to make the government more efficient, eliminate waste and fraud, and now we have good progress, in reality,” Musk added.
His suspension came at a time when Tesla fell by 15 % on Monday, the largest decrease for one day since 2020. The stock decreased by 55 % from the top in December, causing anxiety among investors.
Musk works closely with the DOGE office, which has paid spending and collective firefights in various government agencies. President Donald Trump Mousse attributed the leadership of the office, although other White House officials denied this.
Musk said in an Fox interview that his team is now consisting of more than 100 people and is expected to reach 200. He also said they had taken action in almost every government agency when Kodlow was asked if they were now working in all departments.
“We are trying to make the government more efficient in all fields, so yes,” Musk said.
When asked about the recent attacks on Tesla’s facilities, including weapons shots launched at the Organ State agency and other sabotage, Musk said it was “difficult” but he believes that “we are doing the right thing here.”
Musk is famous for investing long hours in his companies, but some investors are concerned that he no longer gives Tesla this concentration enough.
“We believe that the shareholders have legitimate concerns about the spread of Elon Musk to a large extent,” Garrett Nelson, a major stock analyst at CFRA Research, Matthew Fox in Business Insider, said, “It has become clear now that he is now more time on Dog more than anything else.”