MUMBAI, Sept 19 β Indiaβs market regulator issued two orders on Thursday clearing several of billionaire Gautam Adaniβs companies of some of the allegations of funding impropriety made by US short-seller Hindenburg Research.
The Adani Group, a sprawling ports-to-power conglomerate, had billions of dollars wiped from its market value in 2023 after a report by Hindenburg accused it of βbrazenβ corporate fraud.
The forensic financial research firm accused it of making numerous undisclosed related-party transactions and of earnings manipulation βto maintain the appearance of financial health and solvencyβ of its listed companies.
The family-run conglomerateβs founder Gautam Adani denied the allegations, calling the Hindenburg report at the time a βdeliberate attemptβ to damage its image for the benefit of short-sellers.
The Hindenburg claims have since been investigated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), which published two orders on Thursday about Adani Group companies that included its listed ports and power units.
SEBI said it found the conglomerate did not use related-party transactions to route funding into group companies and so did not violate existing market disclosure rules.
βHaving considered the matter holistically, I find that the allegations... are not established,β Kamlesh C. Varshney, SEBI member wrote in both orders.
Gautam Adani, the worldβs 20th richest person according to a Bloomberg index of billionaires, welcomed the regulatorβs findings in a post on social media platform X.
βAfter an exhaustive investigation, SEBI has reaffirmed what we have always maintained, that the Hindenburg claims were baseless. Transparency and integrity have always defined the Adani Group,β he said.
βWe deeply feel the pain of the investors who lost money because of this fraudulent and motivated report. Those who spread false narratives owe the nation an apology.β
Hindenburgβs founder Nate Anderson said in January the investment group had completed its projects and would be disbanded. β AFP