Adani sells shares worth $2.45 billion
India’s Adani Enterprises Ltd began a record $2.45 billion secondary share sale for retail investors yesterday, as a heavy selloff in Adani group companies intensified after an attack by a US-based short seller.
The Adani conglomerate — controlled by one of the world’s richest men Gautam Adani — lost $11 billion in market capitalisation on Wednesday in India and saw falls in its US bonds after Hindenburg Research flagged concerns in a report about debt levels and the use of tax havens.
Adani Group has dismissed the report as baseless.
Adani Enterprises aims to use the share sale proceeds for capital expenditure and to pay debt. The anchor portion of the sale saw participation from investors including the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority on Wednesday.
Bidding for the Adani Enterprises share sale for retail investors started yesterday and will close on Jan 31.
The firm has set a floor price of 3,112 rupees ($38.22) a share and a cap of 3,276 rupees.
But shares of seven listed group companies plunged yesterday, taking their cumulative market capitalisation loss since Wednesday to around $30 billion, as of 11:38 am Thailand time.
Adani Enterprises dropped up to 6.2% and was last down 3.4% at 3,271 rupees.
Adani Transmission Ltd tumbled as much as 19.2% in early trading and Adani Total Gas sank 19.1% in the biggest daily drop since midMarch 2020, while Adani Green Energy sank 15.8%, before paring some losses.
In its report, Hindenburg said key listed Adani Group companies had “substantial debt”, putting the conglomerate on a “precarious financial footing”, and that “sky-high valuations” had pushed the share prices of seven listed Adani companies as much as 85% beyond actual value.
Billionaire US investor Bill Ackman said Thursday that he found the Hindenburg report “highly credible and extremely well researched.”
Hindenburg said it held short positions in Adani through its US-traded bonds and non-Indian-traded derivative instruments, meaning it is betting that their price would fall.
Adani Group has repeatedly faced and dismissed concern about debt levels. It defended itself in a presentation titled “Myths of Short Seller” on Thursday, saying deleveraging by promoters — or key shareholders — was “in a high growth phase”.
“I don’t see much effect of the Hindenburg report,” Esquire Capital Investment Advisors Chief Executive Samrat Dasgupta told Reuters. The Adani Enterprises share sale “should sail through successfully.”
Jefferies brokerage in a client note said Adani Group had shared details of debt and leverage levels, and that it does not “see material risk arising to the Indian banking sector”. Adani Group’s consolidated gross debt stood at 1.9 trillion rupees ($23.34 billion), Jefferies said.
Adani has said its debt is at a manageable level and that no investor has raised any concern.
Adani Enterprises’ net profit for the period ended Sept 30, 2022, doubled to 9 billion Indian rupees ($110.31 million) while its total income nearly tripled to 795 billion Indian rupees, according to its share sale prospectus.
The company’s total liabilities as of last September stood at 869 billion rupees ($10.64 billion), the prospectus showed.*