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Adani exploited weakness in Indian institutions


Watch CNBC's full interview with NYU's 'Dean of Valuation' Aswath Damodaran on Adani and more

The Adani Group didn’t play a “con game” but has exploited the “weakest links” in India’s institutions to its advantage, according to NYU’s “Dean of Valuation” Aswath Damodaran.

The finance professor at the Stern school of business said fundamentals “never come into play” for Indian markets.

“Nobody wants to talk fundamentals, nobody wants to be bearish about a company and say that stock looks overpriced. It’s not healthy for a market,” Damodaran, told CNBC’s “Streets Sign Asia” on Thursday.

“That’s why I said Adani is not about the company … this is about the weakest links in the India story. And from my perspective, this is not a con game. This is just a company that’s played those weaknesses.”

Damodaran’s remarks are an extension of his recent blog post, where he shared his views on the ongoing Adani affair. 

Art school teacher Sagar Kambli gives final touches to a painting of Indian businessman Gautam Adani (L) highlighting the ongoing crisis of the Adani group in Mumbai on February 3, 2023.

Indranil Mukherjee | Afp | Getty Images

On Jan. 24, U.S. based short-seller firm Hindenburg released a report accusing Indian billionaire Gautam Adani of pulling the “largest con in corporate history,” and alleged the conglomerate has engaged in stock manipulation and fraud.

The Adani Group firmly denied the accusations, calling it a “calculated attack on India” and its institutions.

Valuation issues

Adani Group Saga: India's market put to the test

Adani Group’s total gross debt reached 2.2 trillion Indian rupees ($26.8 billion) as of end-March 2022, according to calculations by Refinitiv Eikon.

“I am willing to believe that Adani Group has played fast and loose with exchange listing rules, that it has used intra-party transactions to make itself look more credit-worthy than it truly is,” Damodaran said in the blog post.

He added: “Even if it has not manipulated its stock price directly, it has used the surge in its market capitalization to its advantage, especially when raising fresh capital.”

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Damodaran also said the Adani affair provides an opportunity for Indian institutions to learn lessons and try to fix the problems.

“As for the institutions involved, which include banks, regulatory authorities and [Life Insurance Corporation], I have learned not to attribute to venality or corruption that which can be attributed to inertia and indifference,” the economist said on his blog.

“A more nuanced version of the Adani story is that the family group has exploited the seams and weakest links in the India story, to its advantage,” he said on the blog, adding that “there are lessons for the nation as a whole, as it looks towards what it hopes will be its decade of growth.”

Exposure to Indian banks

The fallout from the Adani scandal has raised concerns about the Group’s exposure to Indian banks.

State Bank of India, the country’s largest lender, told CNBC the loans they have extended to the Adani group are well covered and there should be no immediate risks.

India's largest lender discusses exposure to Adani

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