HomeNewsOpinionGautam Adani’s fortune, trumping Jeff Bezos’, deserves a keener spotlight

Gautam Adani’s fortune, trumping Jeff Bezos’, deserves a keener spotlight

Gautam Adani’s burgeoning wealth, amassed chiefly from shares traded in India, could be a public-relations dream for the country — with some transparency around his offshore fund investors’ ultimate beneficiaries

September 23, 2022 / 12:14 IST
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Gautam Adani, Chairperson of Adani Group. (File image)
Gautam Adani, Chairperson of Adani Group. (File image)

Gautam Adani’s rise to the No. 2 spot in global wealth rankings, crafted chiefly from shares traded in the local market, deserves to be in the spotlight — as much as a poster child of Narendra Modi’s ‘Make in India’ self-reliance as an opportunity for some much-needed transparency about the tycoon’s investors.

In the Indian Prime Minister’s eight years in power, the first-generation entrepreneur from his home state of Gujarat came out of relative obscurity and eclipsed Jeff Bezos of Amazon.com Inc. No other Asian businessman has ever risen this high — not when Japan Inc. was buying up everything in the 1980s, nor when China’s meteoric rise held the world spellbound 20 years later.

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The four Japanese who took the top positions in the inaugural 1987 Forbes list of international billionaires — the rich Americans were counted separately back then — had a combined wealth of about $50 billion, or $130 billion in today's money. Adani is worth nearly $145 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Surely that’s a good reason for the market to know the major shareholders behind such a large fortune?

To that end, a felicitation ceremony by the Securities and Exchange Board of India, the market regulator, for the offshore funds that have backed the billionaire would be an apt tribute. It would also be a great motivator for the lay investing public. They would get to meet the savvy investors who helped make Adani’s commodities, energy, and transportation empire the $255 billion stock-market juggernaut it is today, even when the combined annual net income of its seven publicly-traded firms is less than $2 billion.