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Tesla loses $13B in market value after CEO Elon Musk tweets 'stock price is too high'

Shares of Tesla tumbled nine per cent on Friday after CEO Elon Musk tweeted that the electric carmaker's high-flying stock was overly expensive.

Subsequent share drop erased nearly $3B US from the value of Musk's stake

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk is seen in Washington on March 9. Musk has a history of sending provocative tweets. (Susan Walsh/The Associated Press)

Shares of Tesla tumbled nine per cent on Friday after CEO Elon Musk tweeted that the electric carmaker's high-flying stock was overly expensive.

"Tesla stock price is too high," Musk said on Twitter in one of several unusual messages, including ones quoting parts of the U.S. national anthem and that he would sell almost all his physical possessions.

The subsequent share drop erased around $13 billion from Tesla's market value and nearly $3 billion US from the value of Musk's stake. Still, shares remain up almost 50 per cent from the start of April.

More than two hours after the tweets began, Tesla had not responded to requests for comment. Twitter declined to comment. 

The Wall Street Journal reported that Musk had responded to an email asking whether he was joking or whether his tweet was vetted by saying, "No."

Musk has a history of sending provocative tweets. In August 2018, he tweeted that he had secured funding to possibly take Tesla private at a big premium, which led a fraud case by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Musk settled by agreeing to pay $20 million US and have a Tesla lawyer pre-screen tweets with important information about the company.