Deloitte resigns as statutory auditor of Adani firm, Adani Ports SEZ shares decline more than 3%

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  • Deloitte has resigned as auditor of the Adani Group’s port company 
  • The resignation comes weeks after Deloitte raised concern over certain transactions flagged in the report on the Adani Group by Hindenburg Research. 
  • In the auditors’ report on the audit of the fourth quarter and 2022-23 financials, Deloitte highlighted transactions with three entities, which the company said were unrelated parties. 
  • Deloitte, however, said it could not attest to the company’s statement as no independent external examination had been done to prove the claims. Following this, it wanted a wider conglomerate-wide audit, which the Adani Group firm refused. 
  • APSEZ announced the appointment of MSKA & Associates as the new auditor. 

Deloitte has resigned as auditor of the Adani Group’s port company, with the firm run by billionaire Gautam Adani saying the auditor wanted a wider remit over other firms in the conglomerate following the report of a U.S.-based short seller. The resignation comes weeks after Deloitte raised concern over certain transactions flagged in the report on the Adani Group by Hindenburg Research.

In a statement, Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone (APSEZ) confirmed Deloitte’s resignation and the appointment of MSKA & Associates as the company’s new auditor.

Deloitte has been the auditor of APSEZ since 2017. In July 2022, it was given another five-year term.

APSEZ conveyed that it was not within the remit of the firm and its Board to recommend group-wide appointments as other listed Adani portfolio companies are completely independent, with separate boards, executive teams, and minority shareholders.

Deloitte Haskins & Sells LLP in May flagged three transactions, including recoveries from a contractor identified in the Hindenburg report, in issuing a qualified opinion on the accounts of APSEZ. In the auditors’ report on the audit of the fourth quarter and 2022-23 financials, Deloitte highlighted transactions with three entities, which the company said were unrelated parties.

Deloitte, however, said it could not attest to the company’s statement as no independent external examination had been done to prove the claims. Following this, it wanted a wider conglomerate-wide audit, which the Adani Group firm refused.

Deloitte had stated that the Adani Group did not consider it necessary to have an independent external examination of these allegations because of their evaluation and the ongoing investigation by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). In the absence of the independent external examination and the pending completion of investigation by SEBI, the auditor had said it cannot comment if the company was fully compliant with the law and if the transactions flagged may result in possible adjustments and/or disclosures in the financial statement in respect of related parties.

The transactions flagged by Deloitte included engineering, procurement, and construction purchase contracts with a subsidiary of a party identified in the Hindenburg report.

Also, the group “re-negotiated the terms of sale of its container terminal under construction in Myanmar” to Anguilla-incorporated Solar Energy Limited. The sale consideration was revised from ₹2,015 crore to ₹246.51 crore, and an impairment charge was taken. The group told the auditor these are not related parties.

“The ‘other matters’ highlighted in the auditor’s resignation are adequately disclosed and addressed in our FY23 financial statements. We are fully confident that these matters will be appropriately resolved in our September ’23 filing,” APSEZ said, without disclosing the contents of the resignation letter.

APSEZ announced the appointment of MSKA & Associates as the new auditor.

Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone (APSEZ) shares declined more than 3 percent on Monday following the resignation of Deloitte as the statutory auditor of the company.

(With inputs from agencies)

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