Eighteen months on, Adani — who has denied any wrongdoing — has largely recovered from the broadside and the tiny US short seller has revealed how much it made betting against the Indian billionaire: just over $4 million.
In its blistering report last year, Hindenburg had accused the Adani Group of “brazen stock manipulation” and questioned the “sky-high” valuations of the ports-to-power conglomerate’s firms.
Hindenburg said it had taken a short position in the group’s companies, meaning it would benefit if their shares fell.
The short seller, named after the 1937 airship disaster, said in Monday’s statement that it made just $4.1 million in gross revenue through gains related to Adani short positions from a relationship with unnamed investor and about “$31,000 through our own short of Adani US bonds.”“Net of legal and research expenses (including time, salaries/compensation, and costs for a 2-year global investigation) we may come out ahead of breakeven on our Adani short,” it added.
The Adani Group immediately denounced the accusations as “baseless” and “malicious,” but failed to halt the staggering stock market meltdown that followed.
Persons:
Gautam, Asia’s, Adani —, —, Hindenburg, ”, SEBI, ” Hindenburg, Mukesh Ambani
Organizations:
New, New Delhi CNN, Hindenburg Research, Securities and Exchange Board, ” CNN, Adani
Locations:
New Delhi, New York, India, breakeven, India’s