Bursting of Adani Bubble Due to Hindenburg Impact; Can Modi Govt Absolve of Its Responsibility?
PJ James
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While these lines are being written, Adani group had already lost around more than $50 billion (more than Rs. 4 lakh crore), equaling almost 20 percent of its market value (âaggregate market capitalizationâ) since January 24, following the release of the âcredible and well-researchedâ report of Hindenburg Research alleging âbrazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme over course of decadesâ by it, Indiaâs biggest crony capitalist. Hindenburg has only focused on what is called âsky-high valuationsâ or manipulations in equities and unmanageable debt levels that had galloped the share prices of 7 listed Adani companies by more than 85 percent of their âstock valueâ.
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But more serious for India is the underlying âbank exposuresâ connected with this alleged âfraudâ by Adani. According to the Hong Kong based investment group CLSA (Credit Lyonnais Securities Asia), of the more than Rs. 2 lakh crore âdebtâ (based on the estimate of financial year ending March 2022) of Adani, 40 percent is from Indian public sector banks and financial institutions including LIC and SBI. LIC alone had invested Rs. 77000 crore in the inflated shares of Adani of which Rs. 23500 crore had already been lost within two days! Â State-owned banks have lent twice as much to the Adani Group as private banks, with almost half of the lending by SBI alone based on mere âgoodwillâ on account of Adaniâs closest nexus with the Indian regime. Obviously, the hard-earned savings of millions of Indians are at risk.
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Under the corporate-saffron regime of Modi who came to power on an anti-corruption plank, Adani transformed himself into an epitome of crony capitalism, sky-rocketing his wealth to hitherto unknown levels in global corporate history. Amidst Modiâs sermons against black money leading to the arbitrary superimposition of Demonetization, the biggest-ever âcorporate-onslaughtâ on the Indian people, Adani had unfettered economic and financial avenues of plundering public wealth and bank-money with impunity, the details of which are already there in public domain. In spite of Modiâs poll-eve rhetoric on repatriating huge deposits stashed away in foreign banks by wealthy Indians, Adani could easily carry forward the use of foreign tax-havens. Thus, as reported, Adani groupâs net profit for the second quarter ending September 30, 2022 doubled to Rs. 900 crore, while its total income nearly tripled to Rs. 79500 crore.
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Of course, the political basis of Adani bubble, whose essence being financial speculation and stock jobbing together with the gobbling up of public wealth and bank money, was his close proximity to state power over the two decades of this century. In 2001, Adani was a small fry compared with Ambani, the latter then being the biggest Indian corporate, whose wealth at that time was 500 times that of Adani. Since then, Adaniâs transformation as Indiaâs biggest corporate and as worldâs third richest billionaire are inseparable from his identification with Modi. Being a college drop-out, starting his career by setting up a commodity trading business in the 1980s, it was the liberalisation-globalisation regime of the 1990s that enabled Adani to set up the Mudra port in 1995. In 2002, the total worth of the main holding company of Adani was just $70 million. But within a span of just a decade, Adani could gallop his wealth to $ 20000 million (a growth of 300 times), quite unprecedented in corporate history, according to Forbes!
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Before Modiâs ascent as PM in 2014, he could be seen frequently flying in a private jet owned by Adani. And, under Modiâs prime ministership Adani travelled with him more than any other Indian corporate billionaire. He could be seen flying with Modi across the globe from the US to Australia or New York to Canberra covering all the continents. Â And Adaniâs wealth multiplied several times in the process. The rest is known to all. The corollary of crony capitalist Adaniâs meteoric rise as Indiaâs number one and worldâs third richest billionaire is the horrific levels of Indiaâs worsening economic inequality and transformation of India as the âcitadel of global povertyâ under the saffron-corporate fascist regime.
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At the same time, according to the laws of motion of corporate capital today, there is nothing untoward in the bursting of Adani bubble. The âfictitiousâ financial empire that is built up by Adani and of his kind under neoliberalism does not have any material basis in production. The market value of âfinancial capitalâ or speculative asset accumulated by Adani is artificially inflated and driven up by manipulating supply and demand for making the highest profit within the shortest possible time. The inflated values of such assets can be easily punctured like balloons even by the slightest disturbance to its upward spiral, resulting in a crash. The sudden plummeting or collapse of Adani stocks following Hindenburg report is to be viewed in this inherent logic of corporate accumulation today. No doubt, as media reports indicate, the invention of new financial and stock market devices along with the granting of unfettered freedom and deregulation of corporate capital including possibilities of even âinsider tradingâ have made the situation beyond the control even by the corporate-saffron neofascist regime.
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Obviously, Adani, Indiaâs biggest crony capitalist, could easily balloon his financial corporate empire solely due to Modi regimeâs far-right neoliberal policies such as liberal tax, labour and environmental regulations that enabled him to buy up precious national assets including land, natural and mineral resources, factories and stocks at throw-away prices while remaining mainly in the sphere of speculation. His unholy nexus with power made it easy for him to massively transfer thousands of crore worth of bank money to his flourishing corporate empire on the basis of mere âgoodwillâ. Now following the Hindenburg Research Report, all of a sudden and according to the inherent logic of corporatisation today, Adaniâs assets are becoming âtoxicâ in the stock market, and are facing massive selloff.
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Now while Adani is facing the severest crisis in his corporate history, as already noted, Indian banks and financial institutions whose assets Adani has used for his money-spinning businesses are subject to what is called maximum âmarket exposureâ that call for urgent intervention on the part of the authorities for protecting the interests of customers and people. At the same time, people should be vigilant over any ârescue operationâ on the part of Modi regime to bailout Adani by shifting the whole burden to the shoulders of tax-payers, bank-depositors and common people. Above all, the Modi regime cannot evade its responsibility regarding the circumstances that led to this ignominious development and hence it is bound to explain to the people on them based on proper procedures.
(Courtery To: www.countercurrents.org)
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