Friday, November 22, 2024

Global banks weigh halting fresh credit to India’s Adani after U.S. indictment, say sources

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By Shankar Ramakrishnan, Sumeet Chatterjee, Davide Barbuscia and Sinead Cruise

HONG KONG/NEW YORK (Reuters) – Some global banks are considering temporarily halting fresh credit to India’s Adani Group but staying put with existing loans following U.S. prosecutors’ indictment of its billionaire founder Gautam Adani for fraud, sources said.

U.S. prosecutors have charged eight people, including Adani chair Gautam Adani, with agreeing to pay about $265 million in bribes to Indian government officials to obtain contracts and develop India’s largest solar power plant project.

The crisis is the second in two years to hit the ports-to-power conglomerate founded by Adani, 62, one of the world’s richest people. Adani Group has said the allegations made by the U.S. authorities were “baseless and denied”.

Senior executives at two of Adani’s global lenders said that they have had multiple calls within their respective banks since the indictment details were announced to discuss exposure to the group and what the impact of the latest development would be on the group’s financials.

“We will have to put a pause to fresh lending until we are able to figure how this will play out. I think it will be a while before the bank is able to tap the credit market,” said a banker at one of the leading Western banks.

The banker, who is involved in talks related to Adani credit exposure and declined to be named as he was not authorised to speak to the media, said most of the group firms have stable cash flows and are not in “desperate need” to raise capital.

The indictment would, however, cast a cloud over fundraising plans for expansion within India and abroad, as there will be greater creditor scrutiny not just on the indictment outcome but also on the “key man risk” for the group, the banker said.

A senior banker at another Western bank, which is one of the major lenders to the group, said that the bank would also put a temporary freeze on fresh lending it was keeping a close watch on the Indian government’s reaction to the indictment.

All the bankers spoke to Reuters for this story on the condition they and their institutions would not be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter and because the internal discussions are confidential.

Indian opposition parties that have long complained that Adani and his conglomerate have been treated favorably by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government called for an investigation into allegations of wrongdoing.

Modi and Adani, both from the western state of Gujarat, have denied impropriety.

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