The Independent

Adani abandons share offer after crisis over fraud claims

- SRAVASTI DASGUPTA

Indian billionair­e Gautam Adani called off his flagship company’s $2.5bn share sale as his conglomera­te shed tens of billions of dollars in market value in the aftermath of a damning report that accused the group of market manipulati­on and fraud.

In a statement, the conglomera­te announced that it will return the proceeds to investors due to “market volatility”.

“The Board of Adani Enterprise­s Ltd decided not to go ahead with the fully subscribed FPO [follow on public offer]. Given the unpreceden­ted situation and the current market volatility, the company aims to protect the interest of its investing community by returning the FPO proceeds and withdraws the completed transactio­n,” the statement said.

The company said that while it is working to return the money, its balance sheet remains “very healthy”.

“This decision will not have any impact on our existing operations and future plans. We will continue to focus on longterm value creation and growth will be managed by internal accruals. Once the market stabilises, we will review our capital market strategy,” the statement said.

The move comes as Mr Adani, who was the world’s third richest man according to Forbes until last week with a net worth of $127bn, slipped to 16th place amid market losses in his companies worth $100bn. He has also been overtaken by longtime rival Mukesh Ambani as Asia’s richest man.

In a statement yesterday, the billionair­e said that the decision to recall the FPO, which had been fully subscribed earlier on Wednesday, has been taken to protect investors. “For me, the interest of my investors is paramount and everything else is secondary. Hence to insulate the investors from potential losses we have withdrawn the FPO,” he said in a video message.

Adani group has faced a tumultuous week in the market after US short-selling firm Hindenburg Research released a report last week calling out the company for engineerin­g the “largest con in corporate history”. It alleged “brazen” stock manipulati­on and accounting fraud worth $218bn by the multinatio­nal conglomera­te, active in resources, logistics and energy.

Mr Adani and his company have denied the allegation­s in the report and called it “anti-Indian”.

However, the report set the stock market price of his company into a freefall and raised concerns over the high exposure of the state-owned insurance company, the Life Insurance Corporatio­n

(LIC), and India’s largest lender State Bank of India (SBI), to Adani Group companies.

Yesterday, the Reserve Bank of India asked local banks for details of their exposure to the Adani group of companies, reported Reuters, citing government and banking sources. After Credit Suisse stopped accepting bonds of Adani’s group of firms as collateral for margin loans, Citigroup Inc also followed suit yesterday, Bloomberg News reported.

India’s market regulator SEBI has not yet announced any probe into the crash in Adani shares and the withdrawal of the FPO. The issue also reached the country’s parliament yesterday as opposition lawmakers demanded a joint session to probe the Adani group.

Opposition parties also raised adjournmen­t notices claiming that public money is tied to banks linked to the group.

Mallikarju­n Kharge, president of the opposition Congress party, told reporters: “Money of crores of Indians tied to institutio­ns like the LIC or banks like the SBI is being put in select companies. This company has been outed by Hindenburg Research’s report. Following which, the shares of the company have fallen. You know who owns this company. Why is the government giving such companies money?

“LIC, SBI and other institutio­ns that have given money ... that should be investigat­ed. We want to demand that there should be a joint parliament­ary committee or a committee supervised by the Chief Justice of India.”

Mr Adani’s meteoric rise has been questioned by critics for his closeness with prime minister Narendra Modi. A top minister in Mr Modi’s cabinet said yesterday that the stock market developmen­ts will not affect India’s overall economy. “India has a very broad spectrum of infrastruc­ture companies,” Ashwini Vaishnaw, India’s minister for tech and railways, told Bloomberg TV. “Whatever blip is there on the stock market is not going to affect the overall economy, I am very sure of that.”

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 ?? (AP) ?? G autam Adani ha l ts bi ll ion do ll ar share sa l e after damning report
(AP) G autam Adani ha l ts bi ll ion do ll ar share sa l e after damning report

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