A US bribery indictment of Indian billionaire Gautam Adani is linked to one contract of Adani Green Energy that makes up some 10% of its business, and no other firms in the conglomerate are accused of wrongdoing, the group's CFO said on Saturday.
On Wednesday, Gautam Adani, one of the world's richest men, and seven others were indicted, opens new tab for fraud by U.S. prosecutors over their alleged roles in a $265 million scheme to bribe Indian officials to secure power-supply deals.
Adani has denied all allegations calling them "baseless".
Group CFO Jugeshinder Singh sought to defend the allegations on Saturday saying none of Adani's 11 public companies "are subject to indictment" or "are accused of any wrongdoing in the said legal filing".
The allegations in the US indictment relates to "one contract of Adani Green, which is roughly 10% of overall business of Adani Green", Singh said on X.
The US prosecutor charges are the biggest setback for India's $143 billion Adani Group, which was last year hit by Hindenburg Research's allegations of improper use of offshore tax havens, claims the company denied.
The US indictment has already had a significant impact on the business.
The group entity's shares have plummeted, some global banks are considering temporarily halting, fresh credit to Adani and Kenya has cancelled two deals with Adani worth over $2.5 billion.
The US indictment, however, says the bond offering "contained false and misleading assurance about, among other things, the Indian Energy Company's (Adani Green's) 'corporate governance' and touted 'maintaining transparency and compliance in every aspect'."
The charges also put the spotlight, opens new tab on Sagar Adani, a director at Adani Green and millennial scion of the company who kept track of hundreds of millions of dollars of alleged bribes to Indian officials on his mobile phone.
Singh said the group would make a more detailed comment once it has legal approval as the matter is before the courts.