'Hindenburg Research no Good Samaritan; made money out of middle-class investors': Senior lawyer Harish Salve
New Delhi: Prominent lawyer Harish Salve has called for a detailed probe into US short-seller Hindenburg Research’s negative report on Adani Group that caused market turbulence last month as conglomerate's listed stocks lost billions of dollars in a short span.
Drawing attention to the US short seller’s motives, Salve said Hindenburg "is no Good Samaritan" and the matter has a completely different angle which is to fill its pockets off the misfortune of the middle-class investors.
Salve’s comments come amid a united call from the Opposition parties for a thorough investigation into the Adani Group’s dealings, with many accusing the Narendra Modi-led government at the Centre of helping Adani to grab mega projects and create massive wealth.
Amid the appeals for investigation, Hindenburg Research is also being viewed as a whistle-blower.
"There is a completely different dimension to this. Hindenburg is no Good Samaritan who has exposed wrongdoing. They have timed the report, they have dropped the report. They do it for shorting," Salve told NDTV on Friday.
"It is my suggestion - I have said this publicly and I am repeating that - the committee must find out all those who have made tonnes of money at the cost of the middle-class investor by shorting shares," he said, referring to a six-member committee set up by the Supreme Court to investigate the Adani group-Hindenburg row.
"Treat that as market manipulation and get them to disgorge and ban them from trading. We must set an example in our market - that first of all if there is a report, it must go to SEBI, it must go to the Serious Fraud Office, it must go to the Ministry of Corporate Affairs - they will investigate and deal with such matters," Salve said.
"But if you are going to use reports like this to attack companies, the SEBI will not sit quiet. They will go after the people who are exploiting market volatility, who have moneybags, exploiting volatility, hitting the middle class investor," he said.
"India is new at this game. We are growing our capital markets. The middle-class investor is petrified that every time he lists in a company, tomorrow if there is another Hindenburg report - by the time it is proved to be false, it is too late, your shares have tanked anyway. We must have some institutional mechanism to say that the people who are making money off this misfortune of the middle-class shareholders are held to account," Salve said.
Welcoming the six-member committee formed by the Supreme Court, Salve stated that the Adani-Hindenburg controversy involves complex financial matters that need special expertise in the field.
"The JPC (joint parliamentary committee) consists of MPs who are very wise people. Here, what has happened is in an area - a very specialised field. What has happened here is there are allegations made on the structuring of companies, allegations made about how shares have been issued, how shares have been overvalued, how the market has been played," Salve said.
The six members of the committee are former Supreme Court judge Justice AM Sapre, former SBI chairman OP Bhat, retired Bombay High Court judge Justice JP Devadhar, former Infosys chairman KV Kamat, Infosys co-founder Nandan Nilekani and lawyer Somasekharan Sundaresan, who is also a securities and regulatory expert.
The investigation should be done in a time-bound manner as the investor’s confidence is fragile, he stressed.
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