In a significant development, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), backed by George Soros’s Open Society Foundations, has unveiled revelations of alleged malfeasance within the Adani Group. This comes as a further blow to Gautam Adani’s business empire, following the earlier exposé by US-based short-seller Hindenburg Research highlighting corporate governance concerns.
OCCRP’s findings have been asserted as corroborative evidence by Hindenburg Research, emphasizing the clandestine control exerted by associates of Vinod Adani over offshore funds that purportedly hold at least 13% of the free float across multiple Adani stocks. These offshore entities have been implicated in masking their influence through the maintenance of dual sets of accounting books.
Gautam Adani-led conglomerate swiftly rebuffed OCCRP’s assertions, unequivocally rejecting their findings. The group decried the investigative journalism network’s intent to drive down stock prices for profit. Adani expressed confidence in the due process of law, underscoring their commitment to transparency and corporate governance standards.
The OCCRP report underscores the involvement of individuals such as Chang Chung-Ling and Nasser Ali Shaban Ahli, who have purportedly traded substantial amounts of Adani Group stock. Close links to the Adani family and their entanglement in affiliated companies cast a shadow on these dealings. The report unveils a complex web of investments routed through opaque channels in Mauritius.
This development follows a turbulent journey for Adani Group stocks, marked by the initial exposé by Hindenburg Research. The Supreme Court intervened by instituting a panel of experts to oversee the Securities and Exchange Board of India’s investigation into the matter. SEBI’s imminent conclusion of its inquiry, pending final details, adds an air of anticipation to the unfolding saga.