From A Diamond Sorting Teenager To World’s Second Richest To Fraud Allegations

The tale of Adani’s scandal-plagued, wheeling-and-dealing ascent is also the story of India’s post-Cold War economic boom and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s rise to power.

By Giacomo Tognini and John Hyatt


GAutam Adani was not marked for success. One of eight siblings, he was the fourth of five sons. His dad owned a small textile shop. He dropped out of high school at 16.

Today, Adani, 60, is the 24th wealthiest person in the world with a $47.3 billion fortune. He is the face of India’s Adani Group, the $38 billion (2022 sales) energy and infrastructure conglomerate.

How did Adani do it? The ingredients of his success include street smarts, politicking, a preternatural ability to overcome controversies and investigations, and plain old dumb luck. Most of all, his good fortune includes a near-four-decades-long relationship with Narendra Modi, India’s prime minister since 2014. Now that fortune is in peril, after US short seller Hindenburg Research released a scathing report in January that crashed the stock of the Adani Group’s publicly traded companies and spurred investigations by India’s Supreme Court and its stock market regulator. Huge debts also weigh heavily on his empire.

Here is the timeline of Gautam Adani’s rise:

1978

Adani drops out of school and moves in with brother Vinod in Mumbai, where he sorts diamonds.

1988

Gautam starts commodity trading outfit Adani Exports.

1991

Vinod Adani was appointed a director of two firms based in Singapore, the first example Forbes found of his offshore companies.

1994

Adani Exports, now called Adani Enterprises, goes public.

1997

Gautam was kidnapped by gangsters and held hostage for 18 hours in Ahmedabad before

being released.

1998

Adani opens Mundra Port, one of the first privately developed ports in India and now the country’s busiest.

October, 2001

Narendra Modi is the appointed chief minister of Gujarat.

May, 2007

India’s stock market regulator SEBI bans several Adani Group companies from buying or selling securities for two years for their role in an alleged stock-rigging scheme between 1999 and 2001.

November, 2007

Adani Ports goes public.

March 2008

Gautam debuts on Forbes’ World’s Billionaires list with a net worth of $9.3 billion.

December 2010

SEBI investigates Adani Enterprises for alleged stock manipulation in 2004 and 2005.

May 2011

Adani Enterprises buys a 99-year lease for the Abbot Point coal terminal in Australia for $2 billion.

May, 2014

Modi is elected to a five-year term as India’s prime minister.

India’s Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) investigates two Adani Power subsidiaries for their alleged overvaluation of power plant equipment imports.

March 2016

The DRI announced an investigation into 40 companies, including five Adani firms and five companies supplied by Adani, for artificially inflating the value of coal imports.

August 2017

The DRI drops its investigation into the overvaluation of power plant equipment.

June 2018

Adani Green Energy goes public on the Bombay Stock Exchange.

July 2019

The Adani Group wins the right to operate six Indian airports.

October 2019

The Bombay High Court blocks the DRI’s efforts to obtain overseas corporate information regarding the coal trading scandal. India’s Supreme Court reversed this decision in January 2020, but the investigation is ongoing.

February 2020

French energy major TotalEnergies pays $714 million for 37.4% of Adani Gas.

January 2021

TotalEnergies pays $2 billion for a 20% stake in Adani Green Energy.

September 2022

Gautam briefly becomes the world’s second-richest person, with a net worth of $158 billion.

The Adani Group pays $6.5 billion for controlling stakes in Indian cement producers Ambuja and ACC.

December 2022

The group buys a majority stake in Indian news network NDTV.

January 2023

Hindenburg Research releases its Adani investigation; Adani responds with a 413-page denial.

February 2023

Adani Enterprises cancels its $2.5 billion follow-on public offering at the last minute.

March 2, 2023

India’s Supreme Court orders SEBI to conduct an investigation into Hindenburg’s allegations. On the same day, Florida-based asset management firm GQG Partners invested $1.9 billion in 4 Adani companies.


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