Elon Musk is facing a new round of regulatory trouble for tweets about Tesla Inc., raising fresh concerns about the chief executive officer’s ability to keep his impulses in check and responsibly run a public company.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday asked a judge to hold Musk in contempt for violating a settlement that required him to get Tesla’s approval before communicating material information to investors. He breached that deal with a Feb. 19 tweet that said Tesla would make about half a million cars in 2019, the agency claims. The CEO posted a few hours later that deliveries would only reach about 400,000.

The SEC’s move, which sent Tesla shares down as much as 3.8 percent in pre-market trading, puts Musk in fresh legal peril less than five months after he settled claims he misled investors with tweets about taking the electric-car maker private. He could face a variety of penalties, with the stiffest being that he’ll be barred from running Tesla or any other public company for a period of time, said Charles Elson, director of the John L. Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware.

“Having your CEO in contempt of an SEC action is a pretty bad thing,” Elson said in a phone interview. “They settled with him and within a few months he’s back to doing similar things. It’s unbelievable.”

Calls to Tesla and emails to Musk and his representative weren’t immediately returned. In tweets after the filing, Musk criticized the SEC and said it had overlooked comments he made on the company’s Jan. 30 earnings call that Tesla may make as many as 500,000 of its Model 3 sedans this year.

U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan, who is handling the case, hasn’t scheduled a hearing to weigh the contempt request or set a date for Musk or Tesla to respond to the filing.

‘Needless Distraction’

Losing Musk, the principal architect of Tesla’s vision of a future where electric vehicles and solar power reduce humanity’s dependence on greenhouse gases, would be gutting for the company. The automaker has relied on its CEO not just for technology leadership but for its bold, anti-establishment image.

But the cult of personality has also had a downside for Tesla, with Musk sending the stock into a tailspin after antics such as smoking marijuana during a podcast interview or insulting analysts on a conference call.

“Musk continues to be reckless with Twitter,” said Gene Munster, a managing partner at venture capital firm Loup Ventures. “If you were hoping for him to change, it’s clear that it’s not going to happen. It’s unfortunate because it’s a needless distraction from the company’s world-class product line.”

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