Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Adani reduces growth plans in the aftermath of the Hindenburg disaster

Adani
  • Adani Group of India has cut its revenue growth.
  • Hindenburg Research accused the group of stock manipulation and inappropriate exploitation.
  • The Adani Group will now aim for revenue growth of 15% to 20% for at least the next fiscal year.

Adani Group of India has cut its revenue growth objective in half and expects to reduce new capital investment.

Since Jan. 24, when US short-seller Hindenburg Research accused the group of stock manipulation and inappropriate exploitation of offshore tax havens, listed firms controlled by billionaire Gautam Adani have lost more than $100 billion in market value.

The group has denied any misconduct and rejected the allegations.

According to Bloomberg News, the Adani Group will now aim for revenue growth of 15% to 20% for at least the next fiscal year, down from the earlier objective of 40%.

Holding off on investments for as little as three months may save the company up to $3 billion, according to the source, which added that the plans are still in the works.

The Adani Group‘s spokeswoman called the report “baseless, speculative,” but did not elaborate.

The group has also been involved in an inquiry by India’s market regulator into its ties to some of the investors in its canceled $2.5 billion share offering.

According to Reuters, India’s ministry of corporate affairs began a preliminary assessment of the group’s financial statements and other regulatory submissions made over the years earlier this month.

[embedpost slug=”/adani-shares-fall-once-more-as-the-indian-opposition-organizes-protests/”]

Read more

Adani: Billionaire’s empire lost $100 billion in days

Adani
  • Adani Enterprises announced on Wednesday that it would return to investors the $2.5 billion.
  • The market value of the group’s enterprises has dropped by $108 billion.
  • Adani is currently ranked 16th on Forbes’ real-time list of billionaires after losing $48 billion.

Indian billionaire Gautam Adani has made an effort to reassure investors after his business surprised everyone by postponing a share sale.

Adani Enterprises announced on Wednesday that it would return to investors the $2.5 billion (£2 billion) raised from the sale.

According to Mr. Adani, the decision will not have an influence on “our current activities and future plans.”

The action brings to a close a week that saw a US investment firm accuse Adani Group companies of fraud.

Adani disputes the charges.

However, over the past several days, the market value of the group’s enterprises has dropped by $108 billion.

Adani is currently ranked 16th on Forbes’ real-time list of billionaires after losing $48 billion on his own personal wealth.

What led to this?

Mr. Adani was the third richest person in the world less than two weeks ago.

On January 25, India’s largest secondary share offering in history was scheduled to begin with the sale of shares of Adani Enterprises, the parent company of his ports-to-energy conglomerate.

However, a day earlier, a report by the US-based investment firm Hindenburg Research accused the Adani group of years of “brazen” stock manipulation and accounting fraud.

Hindenburg specialises in “short-selling,” which is betting against the share price of a company in the hope that it will decline.

The Adani Group addressed the study as “a vicious combination of selective falsehoods and stale, unsubstantiated and debunked charges” in its response, but that didn’t allay investor concerns.

Seven of Mr. Adani’s group’s publicly traded companies operate in a variety of industries, including renewable energy, commodities trading, ports, utilities, and airports. Billions of dollars have been invested in or lent to companies affiliated with the organisation by numerous Indian banks and state-owned insurance firms.

Is that it?

No. The Adani Group released a thorough denial that took up more than 400 pages as the market continued to tank, labelling the Hindenburg report as a “calculated attack on India.”

It claimed to have followed all local regulations and to have provided the required regulatory disclosures. The report was allegedly intended to allow Hindenburg “to book massive financial gain through wrongful means at the cost of countless investors,” according to the complaint.

Asserting that the Adani Group had “failed to specifically answer 62 of our 88 questions, “Hindenburg nevertheless stood by the study.

[embedpost slug=”adani-group-gets-400-million-in-share-sale-investment-from-uae/”]

Read more

Adani shares in India fell again after a stock sale was cancelled

Adani
  • Adani’s business has lost more than $100 billion.
  • The sale of Adani Enterprises shares was meant to earn roughly $2.5 billion.
  • Adani Enterprises’ stock dropped another 28.45 percent today.

MUMBAI: Under-fire Indian tycoon Gautam Adani asserted Thursday that his conglomerate’s fundamentals were “solid,” even as shares in the group’s companies fell again after the group canceled a multibillion-dollar public sale.

Adani’s business has lost more than $100 billion as a result of stunning charges of accounting fraud made by US short-seller Hindenburg Research last week, which the firm has denied.

The sale of Adani Enterprises shares was meant to earn roughly $2.5 billion to assist in lower debt levels, which have long been a source of worry, and to widen the company’s shareholder base.

Small investors remained away when the market price fell below the offered range, and it was only fully subscribed after assistance from Abu Dhabi-based International Holding Company, as well as fellow Indian tycoons Sajjan Jindal and Sunil Mittal, according to Bloomberg citing unidentified sources.

Nonetheless, Adani Enterprises’ stock dropped another 28.45 percent in Mumbai on Wednesday.

According to Bloomberg, the trigger was news that Swiss banking behemoth Credit Suisse has stopped recognizing Adani bonds as collateral for loans advanced to private banking clients.

Adani Enterprises lost another 10%, prompting trade in its shares and those of many other Adani companies to be halted.

In a late-night announcement, Adani Enterprises stated it had chosen not to proceed with the share sale “in the interest of its subscribers,” and that all deposits would be reimbursed.

Going forward with the matter “would not be morally proper,” according to the firm.

Adani himself delivered a video message on Thursday in which he stated that the “fundamentals of our company are very strong, our balance sheet is good and assets robust”.

Serious investigation

Adani’s personal wealth has fallen out of the top ten real-time Forbes wealthy list, and he has been surpassed as Asia’s richest man by fellow Indian Mukesh Ambani.

Adani, 60, has seen his business grow at rapid speed, with shares in Adani Enterprises rising more than 1,000% in the last five years.

This helped him become the world’s third-richest man last week, trailing only Elon Musk and France’s Bernard Arnault and family.

According to Hindenburg Research, Adani artificially raised its unit share values by funneling money into the equities through offshore tax havens.

This “brazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme” is “the largest con in corporate history”, Hindenburg said in its report.

Adani said it was the target of a “maliciously mischievous” reputational campaign and issued a 413-page statement on Sunday that said Hindenburg’s assertions were “nothing but a lie”.

In response, Hindenburg, which earns money by betting on stocks plummeting, stated that Adani’s statement failed to answer the majority of the problems presented in its study.

Critics claim that Adani’s close ties with Prime Minister Narendra Modi have aided him in gaining business and avoiding necessary regulatory supervision.

Modi, who, like Adani, is from Gujarat state, has not reacted publicly since the Hindenburg claims, which observers believe have harmed India’s image at a time when the country is attempting to entice foreign investors away from China.

The firm’s diverse holdings include ports (it just acquired one of Israel’s largest), telecoms, airports, media, coal, oil, and solar power.

Following the Hindenburg charges, India’s opposition Congress party asked for a “serious inquiry” of Adani’s enterprises by the federal bank and regulator this week.

“For all its rhetoric about black money, has the Modi government opted to ignore illegal acts by its favorite corporate group?” Congress declared.

[embedpost slug=”/share-sale-fails-to-halt-adani-market-slide-in-india/”]

Read more

Adani Group says Hindenburg fraud claim ‘calculated attack on India’

Hindenburg
  • The stock market value of Adani Group was reduced by more than $50 billion.
  • Adani group accused the Hindenburg report.
  • Adani Enterprises prepares to sell $2.5 billion in shares this week.

Gautam Adani‘s firm has offered a detailed reply to claims of malfeasance made by short-seller Hindenburg Research.

Adani Group describes the research as a “planned attack on India” in a 400-page paper.

Later that day, Hindenburg stated that “Adani failed to specifically address 62 of our 88 queries” in the report.

Last week, the stock market value of Adani Group, an Indian conglomerate, was reduced by more than $50 billion ($40.4 billion).

It also stated that it had followed all local regulations and made all required regulatory disclosures.

“All transactions entered into by us with businesses that qualify as related parties’ under Indian laws and accounting standards have been appropriately declared,” Adani Group said in a 413-page statement released late Sunday.

It went on to accuse the Hindenburg report of being designed to allow the US-based short seller to make profits without providing evidence.

“This is fraught with conflict of interest and is meant simply to establish a phony market in securities to allow Hindenburg, an admitted short seller, to earn significant financial gain through illegitimate means at the expense of innumerable investors,” the statement continued.

The term “short-selling” refers to betting against a company’s share price in the belief that it would fall.

Hindenburg response

In response, Hindenburg said: “To be clear, we believe India is a vibrant democracy and an emerging superpower with an exciting future.”

“We also believe India’s future is being held back by the Adani Group, which has draped itself in the Indian flag while systematically looting the nation.”

It comes as Adani Group’s flagship firm, Adani Enterprises, prepares to sell $2.5 billion in shares this week.

Hindenburg issued research this week that questioned the Adani Group’s ownership of firms in offshore tax havens such as Mauritius and the Caribbean.

It also said Adani companies had “significant debt” which put the entire group on a “precarious financial standing”.

However, Adani Group announced on Thursday that it was considering “remedial and punitive measures” against Hindenburg Research in the United States and India.

Adani stated that it has always complied with all laws.

Also on Thursday, Hindenburg responded to Adani’s comments, claiming the corporation had not addressed “a single substantive problem we have presented”.

[embedpost slug=”/indias-adani-group-loses-50bn-in-stocks-over-fraud-claims/”]

Read more