Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

MONEY TRAIL

- Bloomberg

MUMBAI: Four Mauritius-based funds that have attracted attention for parking almost all their money in companies controlled by billionair­e Gautam Adani have a history of investing in firms which ended up defaulting or were investigat­ed for wrongdoing.

Before they put about 90% of their $6.9 billion under management in the Adani empire, the funds—elara India Opportunit­ies Fund, Cresta Fund, Albula Investment Fund and APMS Investment Fund—held significan­t stakes in two companies whose founders fled India and have since been probed for money laundering, another that went bankrupt, and a fourth that was liquidated after sparring with the Ethiopian government.

Because the funds are registered in the tax haven of Mauritius, their ownership structure is opaque. Cresta, Albula and Elara have been subject to at least one probe for alleged round-tripping, Firstpost website reported in 2018. This is a process illegal under India’s rules where money is transferre­d typically to a shell company before being returned, giving the impression the funds originate from a clean source. Indian authoritie­s struggled to identify who ultimately controls the money, according to the report.

Some lawmakers are now seeking an investigat­ion into whether the Mauritius funds are being used as a shell for Adani’s own money. Mahua Moitra, an opposition lawmaker and former investment banker, questioned the ultimate ownership of the funds in parliament last week, saying that the informatio­n should be public given the Adani group holds stakes in strategic infrastruc­ture like ports, airports and power plants.

“We want to know whose money is it,” Moitra said in a text message to Bloomberg News. “If it is Adani’s money, then minority shareholde­rs are being screwed. If it is not, then which foreign actors have so much say in our strategic assets?”

In a written reply July 19 to Moitra’s questions posed to parliament, junior finance minister Pankaj Chaudhary said neither the funds nor Adani firms are being investigat­ed by the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e, the Indian agency that probes serious financial crimes like money laundering and round-tripping.

Some Adani group companies are being examined by the capital markets regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India for compliance with securities rules as well as by the department that looks at import and export taxes, Chaudhary said without elaboratin­g, and cited rules that forbid him from disclosing any income tax investigat­ions.

Chaudhary also disclosed names of people registered as responsibl­e for each of the funds.

Bloomberg couldn’t find contact details for Markus Beat Dangel, Anna Luzia Von Senger Burger, and Alastair Guggenbuch­i Even and Yonca Even Guggenbueh­l, identified in the response to parliament as controllin­g or otherwise responsibl­e for Cresta, Albula and APMS, respective­ly. Raj Bhatt, chairman and chief executive officer at Elara Capital who was also identified in the response to parliament, didn’t respond to a message on Linkedin.

A representa­tive for IQ EQ Fund Services, the management company for Albula, Cresta and APMS, didn’t respond to multiple emails seeking comment. A representa­tive for Elara didn’t respond to an emailed request for comment.

 ??  ?? Gautam Adani, chairman of Adani Group.
Gautam Adani, chairman of Adani Group.

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