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Posted: 2023-01-27 23:46:26

Shares in India's Adani Group have plunged up to 20 per cent as the company considers legal action over allegations of stock market manipulation and accounting fraud. 

The accusations by US-based short-selling firm Hindenburg Research led investors to dump Adani's stocks.

The heavy selling of Adani-linked shares, which wiped out billions of dollars' worth of market value for India's second-largest conglomerate, caused trading in some Adani companies to be suspended or temporarily halted on Friday local time.

The Adani group's Australian arm, Bravus Mining and Resources, has faced heavy opposition and controversy over its construction of the Carmichael mine in central Queensland.

So far, the impact of the accusations has been mainly to Adani Group companies, though India's Sensex index fell 1.5 per cent on Friday and its Nifty index shed 1.6 per cent.

But analysts said there could be wider repercussions if the selling persisted.

Gautam Adani and his family have built a vast fortune mining coal to fuel energy-hungry India's fast-growing economy.

Businesses in the conglomerate span industries including construction, data transmission, media, renewable energy, defence manufacturing and agriculture.

Adani 'trading at crazy evaluations' before allegations

In recent years, Mr Adani's net worth has shot up nearly 2,000 per cent to as much as $US125 billion ($174.82 billion), according to Bloomberg's Billionaire Index.

He surpassed Amazon boss Jeff Bezos to briefly become the world's second richest man in September after a surge in the value of his seven listed entities.

After this week's losses, Bloomberg's index ranked him fourth richest in the world with a fortune worth $US113 billion ($158.04 billion).

Adani shares were "trading at crazy evaluations", said Shashank Aggarwal, an investment adviser representing Addwise Capital.

"Definitely, the report has triggered a correction."

The Adani logo is seen on the side of a building through the branches of a tree.
Shares in Adani companies plunged up to 20 per cent. (AP: Ajit Solanki )

Investors began unloading shares after Hindenburg Research issued a report that said it was betting against shares in companies in the Adani empire.

Hindenburg said it judged the seven key Adani-listed companies to have an "85 per cent downside, purely on a fundamental basis owing to sky-high valuations".

Brian Freitas, a New Zealand-based analyst with Periscope Analytics who has researched the Adani Group, said that for now he did not see a risk of wider financial contagion, "other than a change in sentiment where investors start questioning the accounts of each and every company".

However, if Adani's lenders demanded more collateral and shares used for borrowing have to be sold to cover those demands, that would push prices still lower.

"In the event there is a sharp fall in the stocks then the financial institutions themselves could be at risk," Mr Freitas said.

Adani companies suffer through ongoing bloodletting

Mr Aggarwal noted members of the Adani family hold a large proportion of the group's shares, leaving a relatively small number available for trading, which can increase price volatility.

If the issues raised in Hindenburg's report were true, that might have a wider impact, he said.

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