Reuters reported earlier on Wednesday, citing a person with direct knowledge, that India's market regulator is examining the rout in the shares of Adani Group,
looking into several of the allegations made by Hindenburg Research, and into any potential irregularities in a share sale by Adani Enterprises.
Hindenburg had disclosed that it holds short positions in Adani companies through U.S.-traded bonds and non-Indian-traded derivative instruments.
After the share sale was pulled, yields of dollar-denominated bonds issued by Adani companies rose on Wednesday. Bond yields move inversely to prices. Yields of Adani Green Energy's $500 million bonds due in 2024 rose to 15.45% on Wednesday from 12.1%. CRITICAL FUNDRAISING The fundraising was critical for Adani, not just because it would have helped cut his group's debt, but also because it was being seen by some as a gauge of confidence as he faced the biggest business and reputational challenge of his career. Adani Group was working with its bankers to refund the proceeds received by in the secondary share sale of Adani Enterprises. Anchor investors who had supported the issue included Maybank Securities and Abu Dhabi Investment Authority. The company aims to protect the interests of its investing community by returning the proceeds, it said. Adani Group had on Tuesday mustered enough support from investors for the share sale to proceed, in what some saw as a stamp of investor confidence amid the storm.
Wednesday's stock losses saw Adani slip to 15th on the Forbes rich list with an estimated net worth of $75.1 billion, below rival Mukesh Ambani, the chairman of Reliance Industries , who ranks ninth with a net worth of $83.7 billion. The share sale had succeeded on Tuesday even when the Adani Enterprises stock price in Mumbai markets traded below the offer price of the share sale. While concerns had mounted the share sale may not succeed, and bankers even considered price cuts and timeline changes, Adani issued statements saying it was confident about its prospects and that all of its investors were standing by its side.
"I do not know how the markets will behave in short term. But this is a measure to enhance (Adani's) reputation since the investors were staring at a 30% loss even before the shares were allotted," said Rajesh Baheti, chief executive, Crossseas Capital Services, an algo trading firm.
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Adani stock rout deepens TIMELINE-India's Adani ditches $2.5 bln share sale after $86 bln rout EXPLAINER-Adani vs Hindenburg: What you need to know NEWSMAKER-India's Gautam Adani: Asia's richest man in the eye of a storm Hindenburg shorts India's Adani citing debt, accounting concerns; shares plunge Indian regulator looking into $86 bln Adani share wipeout As billionaire battles short-seller, 'IndiaStandsWithAdani' trends online INSTANT VIEW-Adani rides out storm as investors rally behind $2.5 bln share sale BREAKINGVIEWS-Gautam Adani’s next hurdles may be harder to clear BREAKINGVIEWS-Adani re-ups India’s emerging market risk BREAKINGVIEWS-Short-seller attack raises Gautam Adani stakes TEXT-Gautam Adani's statement on withdrawing $2.5 bln share sale GRAPHIC-Adani stock rout deepens Adani stock rout deepens GRAPHIC-Gautam Adani slips to world's eighth richest person GRAPHIC-Adani Group's ballooning debt GRAPHIC-Adani firms' two-day plunge after Hindenburg report ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Aditya Kalra and Jahnavi Nidumolu in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D'Silva, Kirsten Donovan and Alexander Smith)