(Bloomberg) — Indian billionaire Gautam Adani said no one in his conglomerate faces US charges under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act or conspiracy to obstruct justice, after a federal indictment alleged he and others plotted a $250 million bribery scheme.
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In his first public appearance since the indictment became public on Nov. 21, Asia’s second-richest man said he’s working through the legal process and wants “to reconfirm our absolute commitment to world class regulatory compliance.”
“This is not the first time we have faced such challenges,” Adani said in prepared remarks to a jewelry award ceremony in Jaipur, India, on Saturday. “What I can tell you is that every attack makes us stronger and every obstacle becomes a stepping stone for a more resilient Adani Group.”
The indictment roiled Adani stocks, prompted Adani Green to scrap a $600 million dollar bond and triggered a query from India’s market regulator. US prosecutors allege Adani and associates lied to US investors about their anti-bribery practices while promising more than $250 million in bribes to Indian officials to win solar energy contracts.
Adani company executives are charged with three fraud counts. Other defendants are charged with violating the FCPA, which bars US-linked entities from bribing foreign officials.
Adani on Saturday blamed “a lot of the vested reporting” for spreading “negativity” about the nature of the US charges. Adani Group has denied allegations of misconduct by its executives and said it would defend itself in court.
He also cited a “short-selling attack initiated from abroad” — a reference to a Hindenburg Research report in January 2023 — which alleged wide-ranging corporate fraud, causing a plunge in its companies’ shares. The Adani Group denied any wrongdoing.
The challenged “have made us tougher,” Adani said in his prepared remarks.
FCPA investigations can typically take years.
Adani Green said on Wednesday it faces yet to be determined monetary penalties under a civil complaint. The group said separately that it suffered an erosion of nearly $55 billion in market value across 11 listed companies after the US indictment.
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