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MUMBAI: U.S. based short-seller Hindenburg Research alleged on Saturday that the head of India's market regulator, Madhabi Puri Buch, previously held investments in offshore funds also used by the Adani Group.
In a late night press statement, Buch said the report's allegations were baseless.
A personal statement from Buch on Sunday said that all disclosure requirements had been followed diligently and that investments in the fund referred to in the Hindenburg report were made in 2015 in a private capacity, two years before she joined the Securities and Exchange Board of India.
India's markets regulator also asked investors to remain calm and exercise due diligence before reacting to such reports.
Hindenburg's report sparked fresh criticism from India's opposition political parties, which demanded a parliamentary investigation.
Citing whistleblower documents, Hindenburg said that Buch and her husband held stakes in an offshore fund where a substantial amount of money was invested by associates of Vinod Adani, brother of Adani Group Chairman Gautam Adani.
Adani Group on Sunday rejected the allegations and said its overseas holding structure was fully transparent.
The conglomerate's spokesperson described the Hindenburg allegations as "no more than red herrings thrown by a desperate entity with total contempt for Indian laws".
"Adani Group has absolutely no commercial relationship with the individuals or matters mentioned in this calculated deliberate effort to malign our standing," the spokesperson said.
In January 2023 Hindenburg released a report alleging improper use of tax havens and stock manipulation by Adani Group, setting off a $150 billion sell-off in the conglomerate's shares despite its denials of wrongdoing. The shares have since made a partial recovery.
The 2023 report also led to an inquiry by the regulator Buch heads, which is still under way. In May six Adani Group companies disclosed they had received notices from SEBI alleging violation of Indian stock market rules.
Alongside the inquiry into Adani Group, SEBI sent a "show cause" notice to Hindenburg, alleging the short-seller violated India's rules by setting up a short-bet using non-public information.
Hindenburg in July called those allegations "nonsense".
In its new report, Hindenburg attempts to link offshore funds that traded in Adani Group shares with personal investments of Buch and her husband.
It says the Bermuda-based Global Opportunities Fund, which the Financial Times said was used by entities connected to Adani Group to trade in the shares of group companies, had sub-funds.
Buch and her husband were investors in one of these sub-funds in 2015, Hindenburg alleges, citing whistleblower documents.
In 2017, before Buch was appointed as a full-time SEBI member, her husband requested to be sole operator of the account, Hindenburg said, citing whistleblower documents.
In 2018 Buch wrote an email seeking to redeem her husband's entire investment in the fund, the whistleblower documents showed.
In 2022 she was appointed as head of the regulatory body.
"We think our findings raise questions that merit further investigation. We welcome additional transparency," Hindenburg said.
A statement from Buch and her husband said that their finances were an open book and they had no hesitation in disclosing any financial documents to any authority. "All disclosures as required have already been furnished to SEBI over the years," they said.
The sub-fund in which Buch and her husband invested, IPE-Plus Fund 1, said on Sunday that it had not invested in any shares of the Adani Group directly or indirectly.
"No investor had any involvement in the fund's operations or investment decisions. Mrs Madhabi Buch and Mr Dhaval Buch's holdings in the fund were less than 1.5% of the total inflow into the fund," the fund's asset manager said in a statement to India's stock exchanges.
The 10-company Adani conglomerate - active in airports, ports, electricity, gas and other sectors - has benefited from a push by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government to develop India's infrastructure.
The main opposition Congress party has previously alleged close ties between the Adani group and the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, which both have denied.
A spokesperson for the Congress party, in a statement posted on social media platform X late on Saturday, called on the government to "eliminate all conflicts of interest in the SEBI investigation of Adani".
The party demanded a parliamentary inquiry to "investigate the full scope" of the matter. (Reporting by Jayshree.P. Upadhyay; Additional reporting by Ira Dugal, Neha Arora and Jahnavi Nidumolu; Editing by Jacqueline Wong, William Mallard, David Goodman and Toby Chopra)