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Adani Group firms lose $12.5 billion in market capitalization after SEC requests court approval to serve summons

India's Adani group firms lost $12.5 billion on Friday after the U.S. market regulator requested permission to email personal summonses to group executive Sagar Adani and founder Gautam Adani regarding alleged fraud and $265 million in bribery.

The SEC filed the filing Thursday, after the Indian markets had closed.

Adani Enterprises, the flagship company of the Adani Group, was the biggest loser in India's benchmark Nifty 50 on?Friday. The Nifty fell 0.95% at close, while the shares of the company dropped 10.65% to 1,864.2 rupies.

The group shares dropped between 3.4% to 14.54%.

The U.S. Indictment, unsealed on November 20, 2024, accused executives from the Adani Group of participating in a scheme to pay bribes in India to officials in exchange for buying electricity produced by Adani Green Energy.

U.S. laws prohibit foreign companies from paying bribes to gain business overseas, as well as soliciting investments based on false or misleading claims.

According to the filings, India had previously refused to serve summons that the SEC was trying to send.

Adani Group has called these allegations "baseless", and stated that it will seek "all legal recourse possible" to defend themselves. The company did not respond to the request for comment regarding the SEC filing dated 21 January.

Ambareesh Baliga is an independent analyst. He said, "Market participants assumed that there was nothing pending and the group had been cleared. So the SEC filing seemed to have come out of nowhere."

Baliga says that there is no timeline for what will happen next, and the market's sentiment has already been weak. (Reporting from Urvi Dugar in Bengaluru and Bharathrajeswaran; editing by Mrigank Dahniwala).

(source: Reuters)