...
...
...
Next StoryDown Arrow

Opposition hits out over new Hindenburg report: ‘In true Adani style…’

Hindenburg Research alleged that chairperson of SEBI, and her husband, had stakes in offshore entities linked to the Adani Group's alleged financial misconduct.

Updated on: Aug 11, 2024 08:40 am IST
Advertisement

The Opposition hit out over the new Hindenburg Research report - which levelled several allegations against the chairperson of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), Madhabi Puri Buch, and her husband - demanding an immediate probe.

Opposition hits out over new Hindenburg report

Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh issued a statement on Saturday night on behalf of the grand old party on X, saying that SEBI's “strange reluctance” to investigate the “Adani MegaScam” had been noted for a long time. He also demanded a probe by a Joint Parliamentary Committee.

“SEBI's strange reluctance to investigate the Adani MegaScam has been long noted, not least by the Supreme Court's Expert Committee. That Committee had pointed out in its report that SEBI had in 2018 diluted and, in 2019, entirely deleted the reporting requirements relating to the ultimate beneficial (i.e. actual) ownership of foreign funds,” Ramesh said in the statement.

Also read: Who is Dhaval Buch, SEBI chairperson's husband named in Hindenburg report?

Earlier, in another post, Ramesh used the Latin phrase ‘Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes’ (Who will guard the guards themselves) to take a swipe at Madhabi Buch.

Meanwhile, Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra also took a dig over the allegations, saying that “in true Adani style, even the SEBI chairman is an investor in his group”.

“Crony Capitalism at its finest,” she wrote on X.

Moitra also demanded that the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and the Enforcement Directorate (ED) investigate alleged money laundering.

What does the new Hindenburg report say?

US-based short seller Hindenburg Research on Saturday alleged that Madhabi Buch, chairperson of SEBI, and her husband Dhaval Buch, had stakes in offshore entities linked to the Adani Group's alleged financial misconduct. The report, citing “whistleblower documents”, claimed that the entities were part of a network used by Vinod Adani, Gautam's elder brother, to “siphon money”.

According to the report, just weeks before Buch’s appointment to SEBI, her husband requested the transfer of their investments into his sole control, potentially to avoid any scrutiny related to her new regulatory role.

"In the letter, Dhaval Buch requested to "be the sole person authorised to operate the Accounts", seemingly moving the assets out of his wife's name ahead of the politically sensitive appointment," it alleged, adding that the couple’s investments were reportedly funnelled through a complex, multi-layered offshore structure, raising questions about their legitimacy and purpose.

The report further mentioned that SEBI's “impartiality” in conducting a probe against Adani Group is ‘questionable’ due to the “potential conflicts of interest”.

Last year in January, Hindenburg Research had accused Gautam Adani of carrying out the ‘biggest con in corporate history’ - a charge denied by him. Later that year, the Supreme Court of India directed SEBI to investigate the allegations against Adani.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
HT News Desk

Follow the latest breaking news and developments from India and around the world with Hindustan Times' newsdesk. From politics and policies to the economy and the environment, from local issues to national events and global affairs, we've got you covered.

Check India news real-time updates, latest news from India and PM Modi address LIVE
Check India news real-time updates, latest news from India and PM Modi address LIVE
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Subscribe Now