Two Adani Group firms dropped from MSCI’s India gauge
GLOBAL index manager MSCI Inc will exclude two Adani Group firms from its India gauge, potentially dealing a blow to their stocks that are trying to recover from the rout triggered by a short-seller report earlier this year.
Adani Transmission and Adani Total Gas will drop out of the India index effective at the close of trading on May 31, according to a statement issued by MSCI on Thursday as a part of its quarterly comprehensive index review.
The exclusion follows changes in MSCI’s calculation on the amount of shares considered freely tradable in the public market for the two companies.
The action from the index provider firm comes as billionaire Gautam Adani’s conglomerate is seeking to raise funds in what will be a major test of investor confidence in the group.
Allegations of market manipulation and accounting fraud by Hindenburg Research in late January wiped out more than US$150 billion from the group’s value at one point. Adani has denied the allegations.
The selloff has eased in recent weeks as Adani has been trying to win back the market’s trust with a series of investor roadshows, early debt repayments and plans to scale back its pace of spending on new projects.
MSCI said earlier this month that it will implement weighting cuts for Adani Transmission and Adani Total Gas in its indexes.
The reduction was initially announced in February, shortly after Hindenburg’s scathing report on the group, but its implementation was postponed. BLOOMBERG
Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
‘I felt like dying’: Thai Singha beer scion speaks up after disclosure of alleged sexual abuse
In a world of long-drawn crises, ‘wait and see’ may be a decreasingly tenable stance
SpaceX’s US$1.75 trillion IPO: How retail investors, including those in Singapore, can buy shares
The returnees: Inside China’s AI talent reversal