New Delhi: Billionaire Gautam Adani’s sprawling conglomerate has raised over $5 billion (Rs 41,500 crore) in equity and a double of that in debt this year as the apples-to-airport group made a comeback since being hit by a bombshell short seller report.
Adani, who was the world’s second-richest man at the start of the year, saw almost $60 billion of his personal wealth erased after Hindenburg Research in a January 24 report accused his group of market manipulation and accounting fraud.
The group denied all allegations and reworked its strategy, fueling a comeback that now has the tycoon some $36 billion short of where he started the year and two notch and $12 billion shy of rival billionaire Mukesh Ambani.
Star investor GQG Partners bought stakes worth almost $4.3 billion in five group companies between March and August while Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) and French energy giant TotalEnergies poured in $770 million in renewable energy firm Adani Green Energy Ltd, according to company filings and stock exchange data.
Parallely, the promoters infused $4.6 billion in repaying loans against shares, servicing loans taken for cement acquisitions and supporting green investments.
While the equity raise helped shore up investor confidence, the group re-established its bankability with $6.4 billion of loans raised across five companies and refinancing of $3.5 billion debt taken to fund the 2022 acquisition of ACC and Ambuja Cement.
Alongside, it continued with its M&A, acquiring Sanghi cement for $431 million, 49.38 per cent in Indian Oil Tanking for $128 million, Karaikal port for $181 million and Coastal Energen for $420 million, filing and stock exchange data showed.
These together with scrapping of a $850 million coal plant purchase, reining in of expenses, and repayment of some debt were part of attempt to claw back the narrative by showcasing that equity can be raised not just from promoters but also global investors and that the group was a responsible borrower with prepayments and on-time payments of debt.
The group now prefers slow and steady growth over the breakneck, mostly debt-fueled, expansion spree of recent years. The Adani Group has rapidly diversified from its ports and coal-based businesses to airports, green energy, data centres, cement, digital services and media.
And the repayments and prepaying of borrowings, both by the conglomerates’ units and the Adani family themselves, was a bid to convince investors that the group does not face any liquidity or solvency issues despite seeing almost $150 billion rout in market value at one point of time.
The strategy seems to be paying off with share prices of some of the 10 listed companies recovering all of the Hindenburg losses.
But on a cumulative basis, Adani Group’s market cap is about 25 per cent below its previous record of Rs 19.23 lakh crore, reached before the Hindenburg Research report published on January 24. This has been helped by Supreme Court observations that Hindenburg’s report could not be considered as “credible” and nor should media reports be treated as “gospel truth” as also the US government’s dismissal of the
charges.