By Mark Humphery-Jenner*
A few weeks ago, Gautam Adani was indisputably India’s richest man.
Now his fortune is slipping away as the stocks of his many companies crash, thanks to the efforts of a relatively obscure US company named after the 1937 Hindenberg disaster (in which a hydrogen-filled airship caught fire, killing 98 people).
Adani’s personal fortune was an estimated US$150 billion in 2022. He catapulted past the previous richest Indian, Mukesh Ambani, on the back of the meteoric rise of Adani Group, a multinational conglomerate with holdings in mining, energy, airports, cement, food processing and weapons manufacturing.
Since January 25, Adani Group’s stock price has fallen 45%. The catalyst? An explosive report published on January 24 by Hindenburg Research, alleging Adani Group engaged in “brazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme over the course of decades”.
What complicates this report is that Hindenburg Research isn’t just a research company. It’s an “activist short seller”, with a financial incentive in seeing Adani’s stock price fall.
Hindenburg makes its profits by identifying “man-made disasters floating around in the market”. It bets on the stock falling, then publicises that company’s negatives – including doing so in Adani’s case:
After extensive research, we have taken a short position in Adani Group Companies through US-traded bonds and non-Indian-traded derivative instruments.
Adani’s response includes calling the report a “calculated attack on India” and “intended only to create a false market in securities to enable Hindenburg, an admitted short seller, to book massive financial gain through wrongful means at the cost of countless investors”.
Activist short selling is certainly controversial. But it’s not necessarily illegal, nor unethical.
How does short selling work?
Short selling (also known as having a “short exposure”, or “shorting”) is essentially betting on a company’s stock falling.
The process is more complicated than betting on a share price rising, for which all you have to do is buy the stock and wait for it to appreciate.
It can be done in several ways. The most common is to sell borrowed stock. The “short seller” makes a contract with a share owner to borrow shares for an agreed period. They then sell that stock, banking the proceeds. When the time comes to return the stock, they buy shares on the market to “repay” the loan. If the price has fallen in the meantime, they make a profit.
There are also methods that involve “derivatives”. These are financial instruments that allow investors to “bet” on financial outcomes. For example, a “put option” involves betting a stock’s price will fall below a specific level (called the strike price). Similarly, a futures contract pays out the difference between the current stock price and the future stock price. This allows the investor to effectively bet on price movements.
Investors might also invest via bonds. A corporate bond is much like a loan. Investors can short sell a bond like they would a stock. Alternatively, they can buy “credit default swaps”, which enable betting on a company defaulting on on its debt repayments.
There are even more complicated strategies than these. For fun explanations, check out the 2015 movie The Big Short, about the guys who bet on the collapse of the subprime mortgage market that led to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis.
Is short selling legal?
There are two main legal issues arising with short selling.
Market manipulation. It is illegal in most jurisdictions for activist short sellers to profit by spreading false or misleading information. This is the case in Australia and the US (where Hindenburg and some of its positions in Adani are based). But this is relatively easy to discover.
Insider trading. it would be illegal to bet on a company’s future share price using information that is not generally available, then reveal that information.
On this, Hindenburg Research is skating on thin ice with some of its assertions. For example, its report says of Adani’s deals to build a rail line to transport coal in Queensland:
None of the transactions were specifically disclosed in the Adani Enterprises annual reports. We uncovered them only by reviewing financials for the private Singaporean Carmichael Rail entity.
If those financials were publicly available in a database or online, Hindenburg Research is in the clear. But if the financials were not generally available, it risks being accused of insider trading.
However, Hindenburg’s report contains many allegations involving a large volume of public information, which means it would be difficult to establish whether it also used any non-public information to assemble the report.
Is this ethical? Should we be concerned?
There are some concerns about the ethics of profiting from a company’s demise.
Ethics can be arbitrary. However, we can consider some guidelines. These include:
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Does society benefit from information about fraud coming to light?
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If there were no financial incentive, would a company really spend two years doing detailed forensic analysis?
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Does anyone unfairly lose to justify rules or laws to discourage such profits?
Exposing fraud is in the public interest. There must be some financial incentive to do such work. Existing shareholders are losing from Adani’s stock tumble, but that should properly be credited to the alleged fraud, not the report.
Ultimately, then, companies such as Hindenburg are generally a net positive if they comply with all relevant laws, securities regulations and privacy guidelines.
If the report is truthful, blaming Hindenburg for Adani’s crash is like blaming an alarm for a fire.
*Mark Humphery-Jenner, Associate Professor of Finance, UNSW Sydney. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
14 Comments
... yes ...one would expect the regulators of the Indian stock exchange to cease trading of his companies securities pending answers to some very pointed questions ...
And , a criminal investigation by the Indian judicial system , into the running of his businesses ... expect some high powered lawyers are gonna get rich on this ...
Short activists are doing everyone a favour. 99% of people in the finance world are incentivised to tolerate or encourage fraud. In the case of Adani, this includes outright, open corruption. Right now journalists reporting on Adani's problems are being arrested in India. Who else will expose them?
And if you think they're maliciously spreading falsehoods, well they've given you a great opportunity to buy the stock at a discount.
All in all it reminds me of the FTX situation. There have been independent journalists pointing out the open fraud for years, but it gets ignored because no one, including the large finance journalism outlets, wants to diverge too much from the consensus. Then when the fraud gets too big to ignore and something breaks, it's all 'who could have known??'. There are more of those dominoes to fall, and everyone will act surprised.
Hindenburg Research, a small firm founded by Nathan 'Nate' Anderson (in picture) in 2017 that operates out of the Upper West Side in New York City, is a short seller. Only 5 employees. CIA America is behind this to defame India and Adani group. Be aware of US and it's fake propaganda.
What makes you think that Hindenburg's research is wrong? I've read the report; if it's wrong, it should be possible to point out where.
Adani's own response failed to address any of the points made in the report, it was just accusations like yours about anti-Indian conspiracies and evil short sellers. To me, that is great confirmation that the report was correct in its details.
Fraudsters and liars are not your friend. People who reveal the truth are.
And cosmetic treatment of the facts isn't restricted to India, in this case. Even squeaky clean NZ might want to keep a good look out. Just had a re-read of the past BNZ/Tranzrail/Telecom debacle and how the wool can be pulled over any Government or Treasury Departments' eyes.
The average cost of Fay, Richwhite’s Tranz Rail shares is estimated to be around 20 cents, compared with the $6.19-a-share IPO price. (H/T the linked article)
https://businessdesk.co.nz/article/the-life/looking-back-bnz-part-7-the…
You are right Sam, Nate does solid research and isn't one of the smash and grab scumbags who give short-sellers a bad name.
There's much more money to be made promoting fraud and ponzi schemes, and crying wolf when the game is up than there is shorting them all the way up though. $1tn of liar loans bankers misrepresented to pension funds as AAA rated, which detonated the 2009 GFC - none of the major fraudsters went to jail.
Adani is also rent seeking in the ESG domain,and providing exposure to international pension funds.The high p/e,debt,and interelated parties in the various companies and mark to market accounting with the energy companies ( for forward supply contracts) as opposed to real revenue,ring very large alarms.They are well overpriced at least (p/e greater then 350 ).
How ethical is it for a short seller who has a heavy position to bring out a damaging report on the target ?
Is it not akin to manipulation of the market for their own advantage ?
Should they not issue the report first, before starting their short positions ?
Notwithstanding the truth or otherwise in their report ?
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