Tesla shares are up 86% so far this year, which means CEO Elon Musk just qualified for stock options worth more than $700 million.

Musk, who already owns about 20% of the company, doesn’t get a straight salary or bonuses. Under a stock compensation plan approved by shareholders in 2018, he can receive up to 20.3 million stock options by 2028 if the company hits various market value and operational goals.

The news comes as Musk lists two of his massive, multimillion-dollar Southern California homes are on the market just days after he said he planned to sell off much of what he owns.

“I am selling almost all physical possessions. Will own no house,” the billionaire Tesla and SpaceX founder said on Twitter Friday. When a follower asked why, Musk responded: “Freedom.”

Elon Musk: ‘Fascist’ stay-at-home orders ‘forcibly imprisoning people’

The listings and Musk’s comments about selling his belongings come days after he slammed coronavirus stay-at-home orders in an expletive-laced statement during Tesla’s quarterly earnings call. Health officials have said such orders, which forced Tesla to temporarily halt work at its Northern California manufacturing facility, are important to slowing the spread of the virus. Musk likened the restrictions to “fascism” and “forcibly imprisoning people in their homes.”

It was just the latest in a months-long pattern of Musk sharing information and making comments about coronavirus — mostly on Twitter — that contradict public health guidance about the pandemic.

The two Bel Air, California, properties were listed for sale on Monday, according to the real estate website Zillow. Musk also owns multiple other residences in Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area, according to property tax records.

Tesla’s performance

Tesla, meanwhile, already hit the first two operational goals, but until now it had yet to reach the market value target of an average of $100 billion over a six-month period.

On Nov. 4 the company was worth $57 billion. But after years of losses, the company has at last proven it can be profitable on a sustained basis. In January, it posted its first annual profit, for 2019. And Tesla reported a profitable first quarter, rather than the loss forecast by analysts, even in the face of the global Covid-19 pandemic which shut down its production and limited sales.

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On Tuesday, Tesla shares were worth $144 billion, making it worth more than any automaker in the world except Toyota. It’s now more valuable than the combined market value of Volkswagen, General Motors, Ford and Fiat Chrysler. That brought the six-month average to just above the $100 billion threshold.

When Musk gets the first tranche of 1.7 million options, he’ll can exercise them at a cost of $350.02 each, though typically executives don’t exercise an option when first granted. The value of those options, less that cost, comes to about $72- million.

Of course, even that sizable payday is modest compared to the $26.4 billion value of the Tesla shares Musk already owns. But if he gets all 20.3 million options, they could conceivably make Musk the richest man in the world.