<p><em><strong>By Filipe Pacheco</strong></em></p>.<p>Less than four months after allegations of fraud by a short seller tipped his business empire into crisis, billionaire Gautam Adani is considering tapping equity markets in a major test of investor confidence.<br />Adani Enterprises Ltd., the Indian tycoon’s flagship, said in a statement on Wednesday it’s holding a May 13 board meeting to consider selling stock. The company didn’t disclose how much money it intends to raise or who it’s working with on a potential deal.</p>.<p>While the Adani family raised about $1.9 billion selling shares in the conglomerate to US investment firm GQG Partners in early March, none of the group’s main units have tapped the equity market since the allegations by Hindenburg Research wiped more than $100 billion from the conglomerate’s value. Shares have recouped some of their losses since February, though Adani Enterprises still trades at about half its peak level in 2022.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/no-shell-company-in-mauritius-hindenburg-allegations-false-baseless-mauritius-minister-tells-parliament-1217537.html" target="_blank">No shell company in Mauritius; Hindenburg allegations 'false, baseless': Mauritius minister tells Parliament</a></strong><br /><br /> </p>.<p>“The company appears to need the cash now - or they would not be launching an offering before people have forgotten about the Hindenburg report,” said Brian Freitas, an independent equities analyst who publishes on Smartkarma. The discount to Adani Enterprises’s current share price “would have to be in the 10 per cent-15 per cent range for investors to take a look at it, though it also depends on the offer size,” he added. </p>.<p>Adani, who became the world’s second-richest person a few months before the Hindenburg report, has denied the short seller’s allegations of market manipulation and accounting fraud. The group has been trying to win back market confidence with a series of investor roadshows, early debt repayments and plans to scale back its pace of spending on new projects. Adani Enterprises posted a 26 per cent revenue gain in the quarter ended March and said profit more than doubled.</p>.<p>A successful share sale would go a long way toward cementing Adani’s recovery from the crisis, though much would depend on the terms of the deal and which investors participate. Adani Enterprises was close to completing a 200 billion-rupee ($2.4 billion) stock sale in late January, but pulled the offering after the Hindenburg report tanked the shares.<br /><br />Adani intended to use the stock sale in January to address concerns already being raised about the conglomerate. The offering would have widened the investor base to fend off allegations that the shares, which had nearly doubled in the previous 12 months, were rising because they were thinly traded. Proceeds would have also been used to pay down debt and reduce leverage.</p>
<p><em><strong>By Filipe Pacheco</strong></em></p>.<p>Less than four months after allegations of fraud by a short seller tipped his business empire into crisis, billionaire Gautam Adani is considering tapping equity markets in a major test of investor confidence.<br />Adani Enterprises Ltd., the Indian tycoon’s flagship, said in a statement on Wednesday it’s holding a May 13 board meeting to consider selling stock. The company didn’t disclose how much money it intends to raise or who it’s working with on a potential deal.</p>.<p>While the Adani family raised about $1.9 billion selling shares in the conglomerate to US investment firm GQG Partners in early March, none of the group’s main units have tapped the equity market since the allegations by Hindenburg Research wiped more than $100 billion from the conglomerate’s value. Shares have recouped some of their losses since February, though Adani Enterprises still trades at about half its peak level in 2022.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/no-shell-company-in-mauritius-hindenburg-allegations-false-baseless-mauritius-minister-tells-parliament-1217537.html" target="_blank">No shell company in Mauritius; Hindenburg allegations 'false, baseless': Mauritius minister tells Parliament</a></strong><br /><br /> </p>.<p>“The company appears to need the cash now - or they would not be launching an offering before people have forgotten about the Hindenburg report,” said Brian Freitas, an independent equities analyst who publishes on Smartkarma. The discount to Adani Enterprises’s current share price “would have to be in the 10 per cent-15 per cent range for investors to take a look at it, though it also depends on the offer size,” he added. </p>.<p>Adani, who became the world’s second-richest person a few months before the Hindenburg report, has denied the short seller’s allegations of market manipulation and accounting fraud. The group has been trying to win back market confidence with a series of investor roadshows, early debt repayments and plans to scale back its pace of spending on new projects. Adani Enterprises posted a 26 per cent revenue gain in the quarter ended March and said profit more than doubled.</p>.<p>A successful share sale would go a long way toward cementing Adani’s recovery from the crisis, though much would depend on the terms of the deal and which investors participate. Adani Enterprises was close to completing a 200 billion-rupee ($2.4 billion) stock sale in late January, but pulled the offering after the Hindenburg report tanked the shares.<br /><br />Adani intended to use the stock sale in January to address concerns already being raised about the conglomerate. The offering would have widened the investor base to fend off allegations that the shares, which had nearly doubled in the previous 12 months, were rising because they were thinly traded. Proceeds would have also been used to pay down debt and reduce leverage.</p>