Gautam Adani spent the last 18 months frozen out of the U.S. dollar bond market. On Friday, his team settled with the SEC for $18 million, and by the end of the same day news broke that he was lining up a $1 billion dollar bond.
That timing isn't an accident.
The Settlement Cleared The Path
The SEC had alleged that Adani and his nephew made false statements about Adani Green Energy's anti-bribery compliance, tied to a $750 million bond offering.
The proposed settlement - $6 million from Gautam, $12 million from Sagar - still needs a judge's sign-off before it's final.
But the agreement effectively closes the U.S. legal cloud that's been hanging over the group since November 2024, and once that door closed, Adani moved fast.
The new bond would be issued by Adani Green Energy, the same unit at the center of the SEC case, with proceeds funding capital projects and refinancing existing debt.
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Bond Holders Already Voted
Adani's existing dollar bonds rallied on the news, with an Adani Green Energy note due in 2042 jumping as much as a full cent to 98.3, its biggest move since early April.
Most other Adani dollar paper rose too, with the group's stocks gaining as much as 3.5% in Mumbai trading.
That's the market saying it believes the legal overhang is largely priced out - and Bloomberg Intelligence credit analyst Sharon Chen said the conglomerate could now resume fundraising in dollars.
For investors, the move matters beyond Adani, since India's biggest infrastructure conglomerate raising dollars again is a signal that emerging market borrowers see a window in U.S. credit.
Why It Took So Long
Adani had pivoted to local debt after the SEC charges hit, aiming to raise $10 billion in India over three years instead.
The group also turned to private credit, including a $500 million bilateral debt deal with Apollo earlier this year, to keep capital projects moving without tapping U.S. public markets.
The $1 billion bond would mark the first major return to U.S. public credit since the legal trouble started.
What To Watch
The actual bond hasn't priced yet, and pricing plus demand will tell investors whether U.S. lenders are fully ready to trust Adani again, or whether the spread tells a different story.
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