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Adani Green Energy shares rebounded toward the end of last week on rumors that some investors reassured their investment in the company, but remains down 6.3% from their trading level before the indictment as of Friday. (Nikkei montage/Source photo by Reuters)

Adani crisis sequel makes investors in Indian companies think twice

Stock market hangover from indictment of Asia's second-richest man likely to linger

MUMBAI -- When Gautam Adani, Asia's second-richest man and founder of rising Indian conglomerate Adani Group, was indicted in a U.S. federal court on bribery charges, investors braced for a shock similar to last year, when the company was roiled by accusations of financial improprieties by short-seller Hindenburg Research. That episode wiped $130 billion from the group's market value.

So far, the dives Adani affiliates have taken on the stock market are smaller than in the previous crisis, but the indictment still managed to raise eyebrows. Foreign investors are rethinking their appetite for corporate governance risk in Indian investments, while lawmakers and authorities are set to investigate whether the conglomerate is guilty of other misdeeds, raising concerns that the shock waves from the current crisis may linger.

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