As Elon Musk nears end of 130-day DOGE stint, he’s $113 billion down

By Dana Hull and Kurt Wagner | Bloomberg

Elon Musk bounded into Washington as a special government employee earlier this year. Gaining unprecedented access to the corridors of power and data, the billionaire injected a sense of chaos across the US government. He joined President Donald Trump’s meetings with foreign leaders and Cabinet Secretaries, weighed in on defense and tariff policies, and most notably, gutted dozens of agencies as the public face of DOGE.

RELATED: Tesla is in worse shape than you think

During Musk’s tumultuous run, his private companies – SpaceX, brain implant venture Neuralink and AI startup XAI – have benefited from new funding, while the value of debt taken on when he converted Twitter into privately owned X soared.

But it was Tesla Inc., Musk’s only publicly traded company and a big source of his wealth, that bore the brunt of the public anger against him and his policies. Tesla’s stock dropped 33% since inauguration. The EV maker’s sales plummeted.

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In terms of Musk’s personal wealth, the alliance with Trump has so far cost him $113 billion, with his fortune tumbling 25% since Jan. 17, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

“This is 100 days of destruction,” said Elaine Kamarck, the director of the Center for Effective Public Management at the Brookings Institution in Washington. “DOGE is cutting into muscle, not fat. Elon Musk is taking a lot of the heat for Trump’s decisions, and people have decided to hate Musk more than Trump.”

From day one, Musk began seeding US agencies with Silicon Valley allies. DOGE gained unprecedented access to government databases, giving him a view into the inner-workings of agencies that regulate and help finance many of his businesses.

RELATED: How will working in Elon Musk’s DOGE affect young Bay Area tech whizzes/ future careers?

While Musk initially promised to cut $2 trillion in wasteful government spending, by DOGE’s own accounting, the initiative has saved only $160 billion so far. Public sentiment about the project is low: 57% of Americans disapprove of Musk’s job in Washington, up from less than half in February, according to a Washington Post-ABC News-Ipsos poll released Monday.

Meanwhile, Musk has ruffled enough feathers in the Trump administration and across Congress that he now meets several times a week with White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles to keep her informed of his moves, according to a person familiar with the discussions.

A White House official said there’s been no change in Musk’s status as a special government employee.  Musk, Tesla and SpaceX did not respond to inquiries.

Tesla Punished

A member of the Seattle Fire Department inspects a burned Tesla Cybertruck in Seattle on March 10. 

None of Musk’s businesses has taken a bigger hit than Tesla, prompting investors and analysts to publicly plead for Musk’s return. The company lost  $448.3 billion in market value since Jan. 17, more than double what DOGE claimed to have saved so far.

Tesla’s cars, showrooms and Supercharger stations endured a wave of protests and sporadic acts of arson and vandalism. The Cybertruck, the stainless-steel vehicle most closely associated with Musk himself, has been a particular target.

After Tesla’s worst quarter in years, Musk finally acknowledged the pain at the top of Tesla’s earnings call last week.

“There’s been some blowback for the time that I’ve been spending in government,” he said. Starting in May, his “time allocation to DOGE will drop significantly.”

SpaceX Successes

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, joined by his son X, delivers remarks alongside U.S. President Donald Trump during an executive order signing in the Oval Office at the White House on Feb. 11, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump is to sign an executive order implementing the Department of Government Efficiency’s (DOGE) “workforce optimization initiative,” which, according to Trump, will encourage agencies to limit hiring and reduce the size of the federal government. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images) Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Unlike Tesla, SpaceX has mostly benefitted from Musk’s time in Washington. Though many people think of Musk as the CEO of Tesla, the better way to understand him is as a long time government contractor. The influence was immediately clear from the president’s inauguration speech, when Trump echoed Musk’s enthusiasm for going to Mars.

Trump then picked Jared Isaacman to lead NASA, nominating a billionaire who has twice paid to fly aboard SpaceX capsules. In February, the Justice Department dropped a lawsuit against SpaceX alleging employment discrimination.

During the last few months, SpaceX has benefitted from even more government support. The Department of Defense awarded $5.9 billion to SpaceX to send intelligence satellites into orbit, a higher figure than competitors got. It won Republican backing for a bigger role in a $42 billion federal effort to bring broadband to rural America, stirring complaints from Democrats.

At the Federal Aviation Administration, Musk has been installing SpaceX engineers to deploy Starlink terminals across the US airspace system. Employees there were warned that if they impeded progress they would be reported to Musk and risked losing their jobs, Bloomberg News reported.

Musk has also spent time at the Pentagon—a big SpaceX customer. Musk, who has long held a US security clearance, even descended upon space rival Boeing’s military aircraft facility in Texas to inspect next generation Air Force One presidential jets—a Trump priority years behind schedule. His visit in December, before the inauguration, signified the unique pressure Boeing and others have endured with Trump back in power and Musk at his side.

X Factor 

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk gestures as he speaks during the inaugural parade inside Capitol One Arena, in Washington, D.C., on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025. (Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images/TNS) 

Musk’s influence in the White House helped him quickly settle a lawsuit with Trump over X’s decision — then known as Twitter — to ban the president in 2021 following the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection. And it pushed advertisers back to X after years of struggles as companies sought to avoid drawing ire from two of the most powerful men on the planet.

“You’re buying insurance, you’re not buying advertising,” Lou Paskalis, an ad industry veteran and CEO of the consulting firm AJL Advisory told Bloomberg.

X is suddenly poised for its first year of revenue growth since 2021. Banks holding billions of dollars in debt from Musk’s X acquisition — recently considered the worst buyout since the 2008 financial crisis — are finally able to offload it without taking losses.

Other investors bought back into X at a valuation close to what Musk paid for the company in late 2022. They were rewarded a few weeks later when Musk acquired X via his artificial intelligence startup, XAI, at a similar valuation. X’s investors now have shares in an AI venture that’s said to be raising funds at a $120 billion valuation.

Political Liability

Elon Musk presents a check for $1 million dollars to a man during a town hall Sunday, March 30, 2025, in Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Phelps) 

In recent weeks, though, Musk’s seemingly ubiquitous presence in Washington has become more complicated. The Wisconsin Supreme Court race became a referendum on DOGE and Musk, who spent $20 million to support a Republican candidate who lost by a 10-point margin.

Wisconsin was a “a wake-up call,” former Trump strategist Steve Bannon said. “Clearly he has become a rallying point for the opposition.”

Musk then butted heads over Trump’s tariff policy – a centerpiece of the administration – with presidential trade advisor Peter Navarro, who Musk called “dumber than a sack of bricks.” He also called out the negative impact of Trump’s tariffs on the Tesla earnings call, and said that despite trying to convince Trump otherwise, the president is “within his rights to do what he wants to do.”

As Musk announced his soft exit from government, the billionaire left open the door to advising Trump through the end of the administration. “I’ll have to continue doing it for, I think, probably the remainder of the president’s term, just to make sure that the waste and fraud that we stopped does not come roaring back,” he said on the Tesla earnings call.

For Trump, speaking to reporters last week, Musk’s role with the administration already sounded past-tense.

“He was a tremendous help, both in the campaign and in what he’s done with DOGE,” Trump said.

–With assistance from Nancy Cook, Gregory Korte, Craig Trudell, Christopher Cannon, Dave Merrill and Joshua Green.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

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