SEBI Assures Investors Amidst New Hindenburg-Adani Controversy

India’s stock market regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), has urged investors to remain calm after US-based short seller Hindenburg Research levied fresh allegations at the Adani Group over the weekend in a long-running controversy. In its report released on Saturday, Hindenburg claimed that SEBI’s chairperson Madhabi Puri Buch and her husband Dhaval Buch had held stakes in “obscure offshore funds” that were exposed last year in relation to alleged “stock market manipulation” by Adani Group. Hindenburg also questioned the delay in launching a probe against Adani Group and SEBI’s objectivity in the case.

Adani Group’s stock experienced significant volatility on Monday after the fresh allegations. According to Reuters, $2.43 billion, or 1%, had been wiped off the market value of Adani companies by the end of trading day. Both the conglomerate, which is led by billionaire Gautam Adani, and SEBI Chairperson Madhabi Buch have denied Hindenburg’s allegations.

In a statement issued late Sunday, the regulator noted that the allegations made by Hindenburg against the Adani Group had already been duly investigated by SEBI, with 23 out of the 24 investigations completed in March 2024, while the one remaining is close to completion. The regulator said it refrains from commenting on any ongoing investigation “as a matter of policy.

SEBI defended its chief, saying that Buch had made the relevant disclosures required for holding securities. It is emphasized that SEBI has adequate internal mechanisms for addressing issues relating to conflict of interest,” the regulator noted. Madhabi Buch, in a separate statement, claimed that her investment in offshore funds mentioned in the Hindenburg report were made in 2015, two years prior to her joining SEBI.

The Association of Mutual Funds in India on Monday criticized Hindenburg’s report for attempting to undermine the SEBI chief’s credentials, as well as India’s economic progress. The body also called the US firm’s move an attempt to “create sensation by connecting random events done in the past.

In June, the Indian regulator issued a show cause notice to Hindenburg, accusing the firm of making “unfair” profits from “collusion” with New York-based hedge fund manager Mark Kingdon to profit from the market rout in Adani Group stock. The short-seller called the notice “nonsense.

Hindenburg released its first report claiming that the Adani Group was “engaged in a brazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme over the course of decades” in January 2023. This caused the valuation of the group to fall by around $145 billion at its lowest point. Later, Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, an international investigative platform known for its work on the Panama Papers and Pandora Papers, published their own investigations of alleged stock manipulation by Adani Group.

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