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Embattled Indian Business Empire Raises $2.5 Billion in Tricky Share Offering

Gautam Adani’s conglomerate managed to raise fresh funds despite market turmoil looming over the move.

Gautam Adani, wearing a blue jacket, standing near a window.
Gautam Adani, the richest person in Asia, is the chairman and founder of Adani Group.Credit...M. Scott Brauer for The New York Times

Reporting from New Delhi

Adani Enterprises, the flagship company in the Indian billionaire Gautam Adani’s business empire, raised $2.5 billion from investors on Tuesday in a nail-biting process that had been thrust into doubt by recent allegations of fraud.

The conclusion of the share offering was supposed to mark another milestone in the ever-upward ascent of the Adani Group. Instead, a week ago, Hindenburg Research, a New York investment firm betting Adani Group’s stock price would tumble, dropped a bomb of a report on the conglomerate, calling its finances “the largest con in corporate history.”

The Adani Group has dismissed Hindenburg’s report, in part framing it as an attack on India itself.

In each market trading session since the report’s publication, shares of most of the public companies controlled by Mr. Adani have sunk, sometimes triggering a 20 percent daily limit. Tens of billions of dollars in value has been wiped out, including during the days when the company was soliciting bids for its offering, the largest of its kind in India.

Mr. Adani, recently the third-richest man in the world, dropped out of the top 10 and slipped to within a few billion dollars of his Indian rival, Mukesh Ambani, according to rankings of net worth compiled by Bloomberg.

The Hindenburg report was aimed squarely at the valuations of Adani Group’s companies, which had reached jaw-dropping heights. At the start of this year, the share price for Adani Enterprises had risen 3,000 percent over five years.


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