Adani Power

Adani Watch, News

Are Adani’s listed firms looking down the barrel of a major correction?

The Adani Group’s listed companies lost over US $15 billion in value during a wider market correction on 13 March 2024 amid warnings from India’s market regulator about ‘froth’ in the stock market. Despite a partial recovery, they once again lost about US $8.5 billion on 18 and 19 March. The Group’s stocks and bonds have all been consistently down over the past month, raising the possibility of a group-wide correction underway. While there have been long-standing concerns regarding the Adani Group’s listed firms being over-valued, in this report AdaniWatch analyses coverage of Adani Group shares by analysts and investment in its shares by mutual funds to quantify how little Indian market professionals trust the Adani group’s listed companies’ valuations. This analysis calculates that Adani stocks are overvalued by at least 32%.

Adani Watch, News

Adani Power Limited vs Haryana: The making of a power crisis

An engineers’ union has alleged that an Adani-owned coal-power station is part of an unauthorised scheme to divert electricity that is contracted to supply the northern Indian state of Haryana to the western state of Gujarat – the home state of Adani chairman Gautam Adani and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi. According to the union’s complaint to authorities, the diversion occurred in the peak of the summer months, while Haryana was facing a debilitating heat wave and rolling blackouts.

News, News Click

Justice Arun Mishra’s Final ‘Gift’ of Rs 8,000 Crore to Adani

On August 31, a Supreme Court Bench headed by Justice Arun Mishra approved the decision by electricity regulators to grant Adani Power “compensatory tariffs” amounting to Rs 8,000 crore for electricity generated at its power plant in Rajasthan. The verdict is the seventh judgment since 2019 in which benches headed by him have ruled in favour of Adani group companies.

Economic and Political Weekly, News

Raising the ‘Bar’ for India’s Power Sector

Two prominent infrastructure companies belonging to Adani Group and Tata Group had sought the assistance of electricity regulators to hike the rate at which they sold power to several state power utility and distribution companies. They claimed that compensatory tariffs to the tune of nearly ₹8,000 crore were due to them as they had to absorb an increase in the price of coal imported from Indonesia. But this was denied to them by the Supreme Court.

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