<p>Two months on from its explosive report into Gautam Adani’s acquisitive conglomerate, short seller Hindenburg Research has left the Indian billionaire’s empire chastened and reevaluating its ambitions. </p>.<p>Hindenburg’s allegations of extensive, years-long corporate fraud at the Adani Group have wiped out about $125 billion in market value since January, spurring the tycoon to rein in plans to expand into new sectors, according to people familiar with the company’s inner workings.</p>.<p>The group, which racked up one of India’s heftiest debt loads to fund fresh areas of growth, is pulling back from petrochemicals and is unlikely to go ahead with a planned $4 billion greenfield coal-to-polyvinyl chloride project in Mundra, western India, said the people, asking not to be identified on what are internal discussions. </p>.<p><strong>Also Read |<a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/have-you-repaid-debt-worth-215-billion-bse-asks-adani-1204481.html" target="_blank"> Have you repaid debt worth $2.15 billion? BSE asks Adani</a></strong></p>.<p>It’s also dialing back on ambitions to dive further into aluminum, steel and road projects, said the people. </p>.<p>Instead, Adani — who has been closely associated with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s nation-building efforts — will revert his focus to core projects. They include power generation, ports and newer green energy initiatives, according to the people.</p>.<p>Even in these core areas, the billionaire will proceed in a fundamentally different style. After selling family shares to pre-pay $2.15 billion of margin-linked, share-backed funding taken out to finance a slew of acquisitions, Adani intends to avoid this sort of high-risk financing going forward, the people said.</p>.<p>Adani will stick to fund-raising methods like private bond placements and equity stake sales to specific investors — like its share sale to Rajiv Jain’s GQG Partners — to raise cash in a way that insulates the empire from volatile market movements, they said. </p>.<p>It’s a stark turnaround from 2022, when Adani’s stature and wealth sky-rocketed. At one point the former diamond trader was Asia’s richest man and his investments extended into sectors well beyond his traditional heavy infrastructure bets — including media, women’s cricket and data centers. </p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/hindenburg-report-on-adani-group-union-minister-rao-inderjit-singh-says-sc-seized-of-the-matter-1204099.html" target="_blank">Hindenburg report on Adani group: Union Minister Rao Inderjit Singh says SC seized of the matter</a></strong></p>.<p>Putting debt-driven diversification on the back burner is now seen as key to restoring confidence. The group, which bought a controlling stake in TV channel New Delhi Television Ltd. in recent months as the first step in building what the tycoon then called “the Financial Times or Al-Jazeera of India,” is now unlikely to make more purchases in the media space, according to the people familiar with Adani’s planning. </p>.<p>“There’s good reason to believe the company will draw back a bit in order to focus on damage control and other shareholder and wider investor concerns,” said Michael Kugelman, director of the South Asia Institute at the Washington-based Wilson Center. “Reputational considerations are critical.” </p>.<p>Adani has denied all of Hindenburg’s allegations, characterizing it as an attack on India. Representatives for the group didn’t respond to a request for comment. Last week, Adani Group said it expects funding for the greenfield coal-to-polyvinyl chloride project to be arranged in the next six months, rebutting a recent report in local media that the initiative had stalled.</p>.<p>The internal reckoning follows a number of fire-fighting moves by the Adani Group aimed at shoring up investor sentiment. In the days after the Hindenburg report, the conglomerate pulled a share sale and then proceeded to pre-pay $2.15 billion of debt to stem a mammoth selloff in stock of its Mumbai-listed units. It’s mounted a six-city roadshow aimed at rebutting the short seller’s claims and sold stakes in four companies to top emerging-markets investor GQG Partners. </p>.<p>The pullback is not entirely by choice, with some of its major partners scared off by the turmoil. Paris-based TotalEnergies SE is already putting a green hydrogen partnership project with the group on hold. In February, Adani also shelved plans to buy a coal mine in central India, and has decided against bidding for a stake in state-backed electricity trader PTC India Ltd., a highly symbolic retreat given how vested the group has been in developing India’s electricity infrastructure.</p>
<p>Two months on from its explosive report into Gautam Adani’s acquisitive conglomerate, short seller Hindenburg Research has left the Indian billionaire’s empire chastened and reevaluating its ambitions. </p>.<p>Hindenburg’s allegations of extensive, years-long corporate fraud at the Adani Group have wiped out about $125 billion in market value since January, spurring the tycoon to rein in plans to expand into new sectors, according to people familiar with the company’s inner workings.</p>.<p>The group, which racked up one of India’s heftiest debt loads to fund fresh areas of growth, is pulling back from petrochemicals and is unlikely to go ahead with a planned $4 billion greenfield coal-to-polyvinyl chloride project in Mundra, western India, said the people, asking not to be identified on what are internal discussions. </p>.<p><strong>Also Read |<a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/have-you-repaid-debt-worth-215-billion-bse-asks-adani-1204481.html" target="_blank"> Have you repaid debt worth $2.15 billion? BSE asks Adani</a></strong></p>.<p>It’s also dialing back on ambitions to dive further into aluminum, steel and road projects, said the people. </p>.<p>Instead, Adani — who has been closely associated with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s nation-building efforts — will revert his focus to core projects. They include power generation, ports and newer green energy initiatives, according to the people.</p>.<p>Even in these core areas, the billionaire will proceed in a fundamentally different style. After selling family shares to pre-pay $2.15 billion of margin-linked, share-backed funding taken out to finance a slew of acquisitions, Adani intends to avoid this sort of high-risk financing going forward, the people said.</p>.<p>Adani will stick to fund-raising methods like private bond placements and equity stake sales to specific investors — like its share sale to Rajiv Jain’s GQG Partners — to raise cash in a way that insulates the empire from volatile market movements, they said. </p>.<p>It’s a stark turnaround from 2022, when Adani’s stature and wealth sky-rocketed. At one point the former diamond trader was Asia’s richest man and his investments extended into sectors well beyond his traditional heavy infrastructure bets — including media, women’s cricket and data centers. </p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/hindenburg-report-on-adani-group-union-minister-rao-inderjit-singh-says-sc-seized-of-the-matter-1204099.html" target="_blank">Hindenburg report on Adani group: Union Minister Rao Inderjit Singh says SC seized of the matter</a></strong></p>.<p>Putting debt-driven diversification on the back burner is now seen as key to restoring confidence. The group, which bought a controlling stake in TV channel New Delhi Television Ltd. in recent months as the first step in building what the tycoon then called “the Financial Times or Al-Jazeera of India,” is now unlikely to make more purchases in the media space, according to the people familiar with Adani’s planning. </p>.<p>“There’s good reason to believe the company will draw back a bit in order to focus on damage control and other shareholder and wider investor concerns,” said Michael Kugelman, director of the South Asia Institute at the Washington-based Wilson Center. “Reputational considerations are critical.” </p>.<p>Adani has denied all of Hindenburg’s allegations, characterizing it as an attack on India. Representatives for the group didn’t respond to a request for comment. Last week, Adani Group said it expects funding for the greenfield coal-to-polyvinyl chloride project to be arranged in the next six months, rebutting a recent report in local media that the initiative had stalled.</p>.<p>The internal reckoning follows a number of fire-fighting moves by the Adani Group aimed at shoring up investor sentiment. In the days after the Hindenburg report, the conglomerate pulled a share sale and then proceeded to pre-pay $2.15 billion of debt to stem a mammoth selloff in stock of its Mumbai-listed units. It’s mounted a six-city roadshow aimed at rebutting the short seller’s claims and sold stakes in four companies to top emerging-markets investor GQG Partners. </p>.<p>The pullback is not entirely by choice, with some of its major partners scared off by the turmoil. Paris-based TotalEnergies SE is already putting a green hydrogen partnership project with the group on hold. In February, Adani also shelved plans to buy a coal mine in central India, and has decided against bidding for a stake in state-backed electricity trader PTC India Ltd., a highly symbolic retreat given how vested the group has been in developing India’s electricity infrastructure.</p>