The Asian Age

FM: Adani’s FPO pullout has not hit India’s image

Says regulators will look into fallout

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Mumbai, Feb. 4: India’s economic image is not affected due to Adani Group’s recent decision to pull out `20,000 crore FPO amid allegation­s of financial wrongdoing­s, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Saturday.

The finance minister said there has been an accretion of $8 billion to the forex reserves in the last two days alone.

“...Our macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls or our economy’s image, none of which has been affected. Yes, FPOs (follow-on public offers) come in, and FIIs (foreign institutio­nal investors) get out,” Ms Sitharaman told reporters here.

The minister said there are “fluctuatio­ns” in every market but the accretion over the last few days establishe­s the fact that the perception of both India and its inherent strengths is intact.

Answering a broader question on the allegation­s against Adani Group, she said the country’s independen­t financial sector regulators will be looking into the aspect and added that capital markets watchdog Securities and Exchange Board of India has the wherewitha­l to ensure stability in markets.

“...For keeping the market and the markets regulated in prime condition, the Sebi is the authority. And it has the wherewitha­l to keep that prime condition,” she said.

The finance minister also said that the RBI has

already spoken out on the issue, referring to Friday’s statement, which said the banking sector is resilient and stable.

About 10 days ago, USbased short seller Hindenberg Research made a slew of allegation­s on the corporate governance front against Adani Group.

The Ahmedabad-based group has denied all the allegation­s and termed it as a calculated attack on India. It has cancelled the FPO (follow-on public offers) even after managing subscripti­ons to it.

Finance secretary T.V. Somanathan on Saturday stood by his comment on the controvers­y where he

called it a storm in a teacup, clarifying that this is in the context of macroecono­mic terms and the stability of India’s public financial institutio­ns.

Meanwhile, on the decision to convert outstandin­g dues into equity at Vodafone Idea, Mr Somanathan said the transactio­n is being done as a package for all telcos.

He said the government share will be held by the department of investment and public asset management (Dipam) where the stake will be considered as a public shareholde­r.

Dipam secretary Tuhin Kanta Pandey said the price has been taken at `10 despite the Vodafone Idea shares trading lower on bourses because, as per laws, preferenti­al allotments have to happen at the face value of a share.

The finance ministry officials present at the meet also made it clear that the tweaks on taxation in the insurance front will not impact the policy agenda of deepening penetratio­n and clarified that there was sufficient data to suggest that investment­s were masqueradi­ng as insurance premiums due to which a decision was taken to tax the same.

Ms Sitharaman said there is no timeline which has been decided to end the old tax regime, and the government has only introduced a simpler new tax regime, which has the incentives of lower rates. The officials also denied that this will impact the savings in the economy. Chief economic adviser V. Anantha Nageswaran said citizens are being given an expanded array of choices to determine what they want to do with their money.

Answering a question on introducin­g the controvers­ial p-notes for Gift City, Mr Somanathan said it competes with other internatio­nal financial services centres due to which such provision has to be made and added that India always retains the right to mitigate any perceived risks.

Mr Somanathan said the `35,000 crore outlay for green initiative­s will be primarily used for retrofitti­ng in petroleum refineries and augmenting strategic storage capacity.

“Some of the public sector refineries and other infrastruc­ture facilities in the petroleum sector need retrofitti­ng to meet our ambitious emissions and pollution targets,” he said.

On the roadmap to further fiscal consolidat­ion, Mr Somanathan said the government will focus on broadening revenues, avoiding needless expenditur­e and expanding the denominato­r by achieving higher GDP growth to meet the goals of having the number at 4.5 per cent by FY26.

 ?? Nirmala Sitharaman ?? ◗ THE FINANCE minister said the RBI has already spoken out on the allegation­s against Adani Group, which said the banking sector is resilient and stable. About 10 days ago, Hindenberg Research made a slew of allegation­s against Adani Group on the corporate governance front.
Nirmala Sitharaman ◗ THE FINANCE minister said the RBI has already spoken out on the allegation­s against Adani Group, which said the banking sector is resilient and stable. About 10 days ago, Hindenberg Research made a slew of allegation­s against Adani Group on the corporate governance front.

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