NEW DELHI: The Adani Group is beyond any suspicion and there is no wrongdoing found by the Supreme Court-constituted expert committee which probed the Hinbenburg’s allegations, said senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi.
“Adani Group is beyond any suspicion. There is no wrongdoing found by the Adani Group or by the Adani companies, whether it is on stock price manipulation, minimum public shareholding, related party transactions or anything”, Rohatgi told reporters, moments after the report was made public on Friday.
“In fact, it (the report) goes a step forward to further positively say that the Adani Group has taken proper mitigating factors after this Hindenburg report in the last four months to build and boost investors’ confidence in the stock market”, he added.
Coming to the report, it said it would not be possible for it to conclude that there has been a regulatory failure around the allegation of price manipulation.
“At this stage, taking into account the explanations provided by SEBI, supported by empirical data, prima facie, it would not be possible for the committee to conclude that there has been a regulatory failure around the allegation of price manipulation”, the expert committee said in its report submitted to the apex court earlier this month.
The committee said its remit was not to examine whether the price rise was justified and it was to ascertain if there was a regulatory failure. The committee noted that it is apparent that SEBI was actively engaged with developments and price movements in the market.
It also said that empirical data showed that retail investors’ exposure in the group has increased after January 24, 2023, when the Hindenburg report came out. “The volatility in the Adani stocks was indeed high, which is attributable to the publication of the Hindenburg report and its consequences”, the committee said.
“The market has re-priced and re-assessed the Adani stocks. While they may not have returned to the pre-January 24, 2023 levels, they are stable at the newly re-priced level,” the committee added.
It also said volatility is not an “inherent vice” for the market. “Market participants place buy and sell orders in line with their demand and supply, and based on their assessment and expectations, which is, in turn, based on their assessment of the information available to them, and its anticipated impact”.
On March 2, the apex court directed the capital market regulator SEBI to investigate any violations of securities law by the Adani Group in the wake of the Hindenburg report, which led to a sizable wipeout of Adani Group’s market value.
On March 2, Supreme Court set up an expert committee on the issue arising from the Hindenburg Research report on Adani Group companies. The committee was headed by former apex court judge Justice A M Sapre. The top court had then asked SEBI to file a status report within two months.
The SEBI had sought an extension to conclude the investigation in the report by US short-seller Hindenburg Research. It recently submitted before the Supreme Court that the application for extension of time filed by SEBI is meant to ensure carriage of justice keeping in mind the interest of investors and the securities market since any incorrect or premature conclusion of the case arrived at without full facts material on record would not serve the ends of justice and hence would be legally untenable.
Upon hearing SEBI’s fresh application, the top court on Wednesday granted an extension of time for three months to conduct the probe.
The Hindenburg report, which came out on January 24, alleged stock manipulation and fraud, among other allegations, by the conglomerate.
The Adani Group had then termed Hindenburg as “an unethical short seller”, stating that the report by the New York-based entity was “nothing but a lie”. A short-seller in the securities market books seeks to gain from the subsequent reduction in the prices of shares. (ANI)