Tesla boss Elon Musk said shareholder votes on his multibillion-dollar pay package and plans to move the company’s headquarters to Texas are “currently passing by wide margins!”
Tesla shareholders have voted on several proposals, including one that could confirm a pay deal for Mr Musk, worth $56bn (£43.8bn) in his first deal in 2018.
Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment from BBC News.
The company is expected to formally announce the outcome of the vote at a meeting on Thursday.
In a message posted to social platform X, formerly known as Twitter, Mr Musk also thanked his supporters.
Earlier this year, a Delaware judge voided the compensation deal after a small investor filed a lawsuit.
The judge ruled that the sum was “unfair” and that the process of determining the amount, by a board of directors dominated by Mr Musk, was “deeply flawed”.
Tesla called the decision “fundamentally unfair and inconsistent with the wishes of shareholders.”
The company then put the deal up for another vote and asked its shareholders to support a plan to re-incorporate the company outside the state of Delaware.
The plan – worth an estimated 300 times what America’s highest-paid boss earned last year – won the support of 73% of shareholders who voted six years ago.