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Tesla chief executive Elon Musk says he will no longer be taking the electric car maker private, just two weeks after he was considering a deal.

The plan was canceled after a board meeting on Thursday, he wrote in a post published on the company's site.

Since Mr Musk announced his plan to delist Tesla, its share price has been dropped by 20%.

He said he had told the board "that I believe the better path is for Tesla to remain public," and that they agreed.

Mr Musk, who owns about a fifth of the company, said he had spoken with shareholders and major banks to consider the privatization but found the sentiment was "please do not do this".

Earlier this month, Elon Musk shocked investors by announcing on Twitter that he had funding secured to take Tesla private at a value of $ 72bn (£ 57bn).

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It later transpired that he had not closed a deal with Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund, with unhappy investors launching a lawsuit against him after the news.

The lawsuits are still continuing against Mr Musk despite his cancellation of the privatization plan, as is an investigation by the US Securities and Exchange Commission to see if the tweet broke securities laws.

The billionaire entrepreneur has complained since floating the company on the stock market that quarterly scrutiny of Tesla's finances encourages short-term thinking.

But in a follow up tweet after his blog post, he said talks with shareholders had persuaded him otherwise.

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Shares fell even further after Mr Musk gave an emotional interview to the New York Times, in which he said he was working 120 hour weeks and had been using sedatives.

Tesla managers reportedly told him to restrict his use of Twitter in recent days, according to the paper.

Elon Musk in the hot seat, again
Tesla CEO's '120 hour weeks' hit shares
Tesla has faced growing financial pressures this year as it works to build more of its Model 3 cars.

On 1 August, as Tesla reported another record loss, Mr Musk said he expected the company to be profitable in the second half of 2018 and every quarter going forward.

But there is growing skepticism that Tesla can pull it off.

The company facilitated investors with a surprise first quarter profit in 2013 thanks to sales of its Model S car - at the time the first profit in the company's history.

 

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