Las Vegas Review-Journal

Adani woes spur protests in India

Opposition party demands investigat­ion

- By Krutika Pathi

NEW DELHI — Hundreds of demonstrat­ors from India’s main opposition party turned out Monday in India’s capital New Delhi and other cities demanding an investigat­ion into allegation­s of fraud and stock price manipulati­on by India’s second-biggest business group, headed by coal mining tycoon Gautam Adani.

The Adani Group said Monday that its major investors, known in India as “promoters,” had pledged to prepay $1.1 billion in share-backed loans due for repayment by September 2024. The repayments include shares in Adani’s ports business, Adani Green Energy and Adani Transmissi­on.

Shares in Adani Ports & Special Economic Zone jumped 9 percent after the announceme­nt.

Members of the opposition Congress party have been urging Prime Minister Narendra Modi to order an investigat­ion into Adani Group companies after a U.s.-based short-selling firm, Hindenburg Research, accused them of various fraudulent practices. The Adani group has denied any wrongdoing.

In New Delhi, Congress Party workers threw fake currency notes in the air and chanted slogans. Some burnt a suitcase plastered with images of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Adani. Some protesters scaled police barricades and were detained and taken away in police vans.

So far, there is no sign the fracas was spreading across India’s financial sector and the protests are more a reflection of political theater rather than spontaneou­s public outrage. Lawmakers disrupted Parliament proceeding­s for a third day on Monday as calls mounted for India’s market regulator to look into Hindenburg’s claims.

Adani and his companies have lost tens of billions of dollars as investors dumped their shares. Last week, the Adani Group canceled a $2.5 billion share offering, promising to provide refunds to investors.

The billionair­e’s fortune had swelled by more than 2,000 percent in recent years. Critics say he has benefited from strong relationsh­ips with Modi and his government, while others point out he also prospered under previous administra­tions.

Shares in Adani Enterprise­s, the group’s flagship, wobbled Monday and were down 2.1 percent by mid-afternoon Monday. Its market value has shrunk by more than 50 percent since the Hindenburg report. Stock in five other Adani-listed companies fell 5 percent to 10 percent.

The move by Adani to repay sharebacke­d borrowing early addressed one of the key concerns raised by Hindenburg: heavy borrowing using group shares as collateral. Adani said in a written statement that the pledge by major shareholde­rs to repay that debt was “in continuati­on of promoter’s assurance to prepay all share-backed financing.”

The wild swings in share prices have highlighte­d concerns over corporate governance, especially as the country tries to woo foreign investors.

On Saturday, the Securities and Exchange Board of India issued a rare statement seeking to calm investors.

“During the past week, unusual price movement in the stocks of a business conglomera­te has been observed,” India’s market regulator said, without naming the Adani Group. It said mechanisms were in place to deal with volatility in specific stocks. The SEBI would examine any informatio­n before taking “appropriat­e action,” it said.

 ?? Manish Swarup The Associated Press ?? Members of the opposition Congress party hold placards with images of Indian businessma­n Gautam Adani of the Adani Group during a protest in New Delhi, India, on Monday.
Manish Swarup The Associated Press Members of the opposition Congress party hold placards with images of Indian businessma­n Gautam Adani of the Adani Group during a protest in New Delhi, India, on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States