Tesla has lost another long-tenured executive: Sendil Palani, the company’s VP of Finance, confirmed his departure after a 17-year run that began when the automaker was weeks from running out of cash.
Palani is one of the last pre-IPO-era leaders still in a senior role at Tesla, and his exit deepens what has become a sweeping drain of institutional knowledge across virtually every critical function over the past two years.
A rare pre-IPO survivor
Palani joined Tesla’s finance team in January 2009, just days after the company narrowly avoided bankruptcy over Christmas 2008. At the time, Tesla had roughly 300 employees, was producing one vehicle per day, and had enough cash on hand to survive about four weeks.
In a farewell post on X, Palani described the experience as deeply fulfilling. He praised CEO Elon Musk for “demonstrating the power of thinking from first principles at all times, about all things” and called his finance team “heroes within a company full of heroics.”
Over his 17-year tenure, Palani’s role expanded well beyond traditional accounting. He described engaging with areas spanning vehicle engineering and neural network development, while his team managed hardware sales, software transactions, and digital assets. He oversaw the financial side of every major Tesla vehicle launch and the company’s expansion to global manufacturing.
Palani was also involved in securing the critical $465 million Department of Energy loan in 2010 — the lifeline that funded Tesla’s Fremont factory and the Model S program. Tesla repaid that loan nine years early, a milestone that cemented the company’s credibility with investors.
His parting advice to the public was pointed: “Remember that Tesla’s mission is so ambitious and complex that any narrative about the company is naturally an oversimplification. Seek the truth about the company at all times.”
The growing exodus
Palani did not give a specific reason for leaving, but his departure extends a pattern that has become impossible to ignore. Since mid-2024, Tesla has lost senior leaders responsible for nearly every core function of the business.
The list is staggering. Drew Baglino, the 18-year powertrain and energy engineering veteran, left in April 2024 amid a wave of mass layoffs. Head of software David Lau departed in 2025. Tesla has cycled through four global sales leaders in under two years, including Omead Afshar, who was fired in June 2025.
In 2026 alone, the pace has accelerated. Another manufacturing director left in January. Tesla went through yet another head of North American sales in February. Victor Nechita, the Cybercab program manager, exited days after the first production unit rolled off the line. And just yesterday, Thomas Dmytryk, the director who built Tesla’s OTA and Robotaxi infrastructure, left after 11 years.
The cumulative toll now spans powertrain engineering, software development, sales leadership, vehicle program management, autonomous driving infrastructure, crash safety, battery technology, and now finance.
CFO Vaibhav Taneja, who replaced Zach Kirkhorn in August 2023, remains in place. But Palani’s exit means another layer of financial institutional knowledge has walked out the door. For context, former VP of Finance Sreela Venkataratnam also departed in 2024.
Electrek’s Take
At some point, the sheer volume of senior departures becomes a material concern regardless of how any individual exit is framed. Palani was one of Tesla’s last links to the company’s near-death experience in 2008 and its unlikely rise to the world’s most valuable automaker. That kind of institutional memory does not get replaced by a new hire, no matter how talented.
What makes this particularly notable is the breadth. Tesla is not just losing people in one troubled division. The company has hemorrhaged leadership in powertrain, software, sales, manufacturing, program management, crash safety, battery development, supercharging, and now finance — all in roughly 18 months. Tesla Chair Robyn Denholm was asked last year about the departures and couldn’t name specific senior hires to offset the losses.
We have long argued that Tesla’s bench strength would eventually be tested by Musk’s increasing focus on ventures outside the automaker. The departure of someone like Palani, who stuck around through the company’s darkest days and stayed for 17 years, suggests something is shifting in how even the most loyal insiders view Tesla’s trajectory. The company still has CFO Taneja and a handful of long-tenured executives, but the ranks are thinning fast.
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