It has been nearly 18 months since our original report on the Adani Group presented overwhelming evidence that the Indian conglomerate was operating “the largest con in corporate history”. Our report exposed a web of offshore, primarily Mauritius-based shell entities used for suspected billions of dollars of undisclosed related party transactions, undisclosed investment and stock manipulation.
Since then, despite the evidence, along with over 40 independent media investigations corroborating and expanding on our original work, Indian securities regulator SEBI has taken no public action against the Adani Group.[1] Media has reported that SEBI is likely to impose mere token, technical violations on the Adani Group despite the breadth and magnitude of the issues.
Instead, on June 27th, 2024, SEBI sent us an apparent ‘show cause’ notice. SEBI did not allege any factual errors in our 106-page analysis, but instead claimed the disclosure around our short position– which we disclosed repeatedly– was deficient, arguing that we should have provided even more robust disclosure. [1,2]
The SEBI notice also claimed our report was “reckless” for quoting a banned broker with specific experience dealing with SEBI who detailed how the regulator was fully aware that firms like Adani used complex offshore entities to flout rules, and that the regulator participated in the schemes.
In our July 2024 response to the ‘show cause’ notice, we wrote that we found it odd how SEBI—a regulator specifically set up to prevent fraudulent practices – showed little interest in meaningfully pursuing the parties that ran a secret offshore shell empire engaging in billions of dollars of undisclosed related party transactions through public companies while propping up its stocks through a network of sham investment entities.
The Indian Supreme Court said that SEBI had drawn a blank in its investigation of these shareholders, as detailed in the court records. In late June 2024, Adani CFO Jugeshinder Singh described some regulator notices aimed towards Adani Group as “trivial”, apparently writing off the prospect of their severity even before the process was concluded.
As detailed in our original Adani report, documents from the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) alleged that Adani “grossly” overvalued the import valuation of key power equipment, using offshore shell entities to siphon and launder money from the Indian public. [1]
A subsequent investigation by non-profit project Adani Watch in December 2023 showed how a web of offshore entities, controlled by Gautam Adani’s brother, Vinod Adani, were recipients of funds from the alleged over-invoicing of power equipment.
In one complex structure, a Vinod Adani controlled company had invested in “Global Dynamic Opportunities Fund” (“GDOF”) in Bermuda, a British overseas territory and tax haven, which then invested in IPE Plus Fund 1, a fund registered in Mauritius, another tax haven.
A separate investigation by the Financial Times showed that the parent fund of GDOF – the Bermuda-based Global Opportunities Fund (“GOF”) – was used by two Adani associates “to amass and trade large positions in shares of the Adani Group”.
These nested funds are managed by Indian Infoline (“IIFL”), now called 360 One per private fund data and IIFL’s marketing material. [1, 2]
IIFL, is a publicly listed wealth management firm in India which has a long history in setting up convoluted fund structures and with previous ties to the Wirecard scandal, Germany’s largest ever fraud case.[2] IIFL Wealth was alleged to have committed fraud in a takeover deal involving Wirecard, using a Mauritius fund structure, per a lawsuit in UK courts.
Sitting below GDOF in the multi-layer structure (two layers below the Global Opportunities Fund), is the IPE Plus fund, a small and obscure offshore fund registered in Mauritius. The IPE Plus Fund had only U.S. $38.43 million in assets under management (AUM) at the end of December 2017, per IIFL disclosures.
AdaniWatch reported that “by March 2017, ATIL, a Vinod Adani company, had a total balance of $40.38 million with GDOF”. Thus, while we are unable to see the total assets of parent fund GDOF, it appears a significant portion of the assets of the funds may be comprised of Adani money.
Beyond being used as an alleged funnel for Vinod Adani’s money, the tiny fund had other close ties to Adani. The Founder and Chief Investment Officer (CIO) of the IPE Plus Fund was Anil Ahuja, per his biography. At the same time, Ahuja was a director of Adani Enterprises where he served three terms spanning nine years ending in June 2017, per his biography and exchange disclosures. Prior to that he was a director of Adani Power. [Pg. 5]
We had previously noted Adani’s total confidence in continuing to operate without the risk of serious regulatory intervention, suggesting that this may be explained through Adani’s relationship with SEBI Chairperson, Madhabi Buch.
What we hadn’t realized: the current SEBI Chairperson and her husband, Dhaval Buch, had hidden stakes in the exact same obscure offshore Bermuda and Mauritius funds, found in the same complex nested structure, used by Vinod Adani.[3]
Madhabi Buch and her husband Dhaval Buch first appear to have opened their account with IPE Plus Fund 1 on June 5th, 2015 in Singapore, per whistleblower documents.
A declaration of funds, signed by a principal at IIFL states that the source of the investment is “salary” and the couple´s net worth is estimated at $10 million.
Madhabi Buch was appointed a “Whole Time Member” of SEBI in April 2017, according to her LinkedIn profile.
On March 22nd, 2017, just weeks ahead of that politically sensitive appointment, Madhabi’s husband, Dhaval Buch, wrote to Mauritius fund administrator Trident Trust, according to documents we received from a whistleblower. The email was regarding his and his wife’s investment in the Global Dynamic Opportunities Fund (“GDOF”).
In the letter, Dhaval Buch requested to “be the sole person authorised to operate the Accounts”, seemingly moving the assets out of his wife’s name ahead of the politically sensitive appointment.
In a later account statement dated February 26th, 2018, addressed to Madhabi Buch’s private email, the full details of the structure are revealed: “GDOF Cell 90 (IPEplus Fund 1)”. Again, this is the exact same Mauritius-registered “cell” of the fund, found several layers deep in a convoluted structure, reportedly used by Vinod Adani.[4]
The total value of Buch’s stake was worth U.S. $872,762.25 at the time.
Later, on February 25th, 2018, during Buch’s tenure as a Whole-Time Member of SEBI, whistleblower documents show she personally wrote to India Infoline using her private Gmail account, doing business through her husband’s name, to redeem the units in the fund.
In brief, despite the existence of thousands of mainstream, reputable onshore Indian mutual fund products, an industry she now is responsible for regulating, documents show SEBI Chairperson Madhabi Buch and her husband had stakes in a multi-layered offshore fund structure with miniscule assets, traversing known high-risk jurisdictions, overseen by a company with reported ties to the Wirecard scandal, in the same entity run by an Adani director and significantly used by Vinod Adani in the alleged Adani cash siphoning scandal.
In response to requests from the Indian Supreme Court to investigate the Adani matter, SEBI was said to have a hit a wall unveiling the holders of the offshore funds. The Supreme Court said that while SEBI seemingly agreed with our concerns over who funded Adani’s offshore shareholders, “it is evident that SEBI has drawn a blank in this investigation”.
We suspect SEBI’s unwillingness to take meaningful action against suspect offshore shareholders in the Adani Group may stem from Chairperson Madhabi Buch’s complicity in using the exact same funds used by Vinod Adani, brother of Gautam Adani.
In our original report, we identified, among other funds, two Mauritius entities called EM Resurgent Fund and Emerging India Focus Funds. Both entities were disclosed as related parties of India Infoline (now called 360 One) and overseen by its employees, per its annual reports.[5] [Pg. 34]
We noted that the “the trading patterns [of these funds] suggest that the stock parking entities and the suspicious offshore entities may have artificially inflated the volume and/or price of some Adani listed companies.”
Our concerns were further corroborated by an investigation by the Financial Times, which found a “secret paper trail” at EM Resurgent and Emerging India Focus Funds. The investigation raised questions whether Adani used business associates as “front men” to “bypass rules for Indian companies that prevent share price manipulation.”
To date, SEBI has taken no action against these funds.
On March 27th, 2013, Agora Partners Pte Ltd was registered in Singapore. It describes itself as a “business and management consultancy”, per a Singapore director search. [Pgs. 1-3] At the time, Madhabi Buch was disclosed as a 100% shareholder, according to the company’s 2014 annual return. [Pgs. 1-3]
In April 2017, Madhabi Buch joined SEBI as a whole time member, per her Linkedin, and became Chairperson at SEBI on March 1st, 2022. Buch remained a 100% shareholder of Agora Partners until March 16th, 2022, per Singaporean records.
Likely realizing the political sensitivity of such a conflict of interest, were it ever revealed, she transferred her stake in Agora Partners to her husband, Dhaval Buch per Singaporean share transfer details.
This offshore Singaporean entity is exempt from disclosing financial statements so it is unclear the amount of revenue it derives from its consulting business and from whom – crucial information for those assessing the probity of the Chairperson’s external businesses interests.[6]
This is especially important given the direct email evidence presented earlier showing SEBI’s Chairperson, Madhabi Buch, having done business via private email through her husband’s name in offshore fund entities.
Dhaval Buch, the husband of SEBI Chairperson Madhabi Buch, describes himself as having “deep experience in procurement and all aspects of the supply chain”, per his Linkedin. He spent most of his time at consumer company Unilever, rising to become Chief Procurement Officer, according to his Linkedin.
The same source shows that over the past two decades, he had never worked for a fund, in real estate or at a capital markets firm.
Despite the lack of experience in these areas, he joined Blackstone, a global private equity firm and large investor in India, as a “Senior Advisor” in July 2019, per his Linkedin.
Blackstone has been one of the largest investors and sponsors of REITs, a nascent asset class in India.
India’s first ever REIT, Embassy, obtained SEBI approval and IPO’ed on April 1st, 2019, sponsored by Blackstone, just 3 months before Dhaval Buch reported joining Blackstone in July 2019.
13 months later, in August 2020, Mindspace REIT, backed by Blackstone, became India’s second REIT to IPO, after SEBI approval.
Blackstone now sponsors Nexus Select Trust, described as India’s largest retail platform of assets, by ICICI Research, which listed in May, 2023 and became India’s fourth publicly traded REIT. Blackstone has multiple other interests across retail estate.
Since Madhabi Buch became Chairperson in March 2022, SEBI has proposed and implemented a raft of REIT legislation, of significant benefit to Blackstone as one of the largest REIT sponsors in India, whom her husband works for.
This has included, among other more procedural updates:
During this time, Blackstone cashed out its entire stake in Embassy REIT, in December 2023 valued at circa INR 71 billion (U.S. $853 million at the time), in India’s largest block trade of the year, per media reports.
Perhaps the biggest champion of REITs in India is SEBI Chairperson Madhabi Buch, who has promoted the asset class at various conferences.
On March 20th, 2023, she said REITs are among her “favourite products for the future” at a News18 Rising Bharat Summit.
At a SEBI-NISM research conference a year later, in March 2024, she urged investors to have a “positive” view on REITs, per media reports.
On April 2nd, 2024, at the CII Corporate Governance Summit, the Chairperson predicted enormous growth in REITs, suggesting it would become as large as India’s GDP along with InvITs (infrastructure investment trusts) and municipal bonds:
“[REITS, InvITs and municipal bonds] can be in value equal to our entire market the way it is valued today, in others words one time GDP” [1:15]
While making these statements, she failed to disclose the obvious beneficiary of these regulations: the fund her husband advises, Blackstone.[7]
Agora Advisory Private Limited was set up in India on May 7th, 2013, per its certificate of incorporation. It discloses consultancy as its main business activity. [Pg. 2]
To date, Madhabi Buch remains a 99% owner of the business with her husband, Dhaval Buch as a director, per its shareholding list and corporate records.
Unlike the opaque Singaporean consulting entity, we have more visibility into the Indian entity. At the end of financial year 2022, Agora Advisory (99% owned by Madhabi Buch), generated INR 19.8 million (U.S. $261,000) revenue from consulting, per its annual report. [Pg. 6] This was 4.4 times Madhabi Buch’s previous disclosed salary as a Whole-Time member at SEBI.
We think our findings raise questions that merit further investigation. We welcome additional transparency.
To the extent that any proceeds are derived from this report they will be donated to causes that support free expression.
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[1] To date, we have seen no public orders on the SEBI website against the Adani Group.
[2] IIFL’s subsidiary filings in Mauritius detail many investment management structures going back over a decade. [Pg. 29] Some of these funds have been described by media as “opaque” and “Russian doll”-like.
[3] Both these countries are designated high risk country by global custodians, operating in India, who reportedly drew up a list at the behest of SEBI, per the Economic Times.
[4] Cells can be thought of as a “sleeve” of the company to hold specific assets distinct from others.
[5] EM Resurgent shared common directors Rohit Kumar and Maharoof Parokkot, per IIFL’s subsidiary filings and the Mauritius corporate registry. Emerging India Focus Fund also lists Amit Garg as a director, per the Mauritius registry. He is also a current director in IIFL’s subsidiaries.
[6] It is noted that politicians in India, for example, must file Affidavits disclosing their assets.
[7] Incidentally, one party that has benefitted from Blackstone’s foray into Indian real estate is Adani. In May 2024, it was reported that Blackstone, was “all set to buy” Adani’s BKC Office space in, in a deal worth INR 18-20 billion (U.S. $215 million to $240 million). This is part of Adani’s ongoing efforts to monetize real estate assets.