Widow looking for answers after Quebec man dies in Texas Ironman competition
The widow of a Quebec man who died competing in an Ironman competition is looking for answers.
Hindenburg Research, the financial research firm with an explosive name and a track record of sending the stock prices of its targets tumbling, is taking on one of the world's richest men.
Hindenburg is back in the headlines after last week accusing Indian conglomerate Adani Group of "a brazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme." It cited two years of research, including talks with former Adani senior executives and reviews of thousands of documents.
The Adani Group has blasted the accusations, calling them "a malicious combination of selective misinformation and stale, baseless and discredited allegations that have been tested and rejected by India's highest courts."
Nevertheless, Hindenburg's scorching allegations have caused the fortune of Adani Group's founder, Gautam Adani, to slide by more than $34 billion in just a week, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires index. Here's a look at the firm behind all the movement:
Hindenburg says it specializes in "forensic financial research." In layman's terms, it looks for corruption or fraud in the business world, such as accounting irregularities and bad actors in management.
The firm says it sees the Hindenburg, the airship that famously caught fire in the 1930s to the cry of "Oh, the humanity," as the "epitome of a totally man-made, totally avoidable disaster." It says it looks for similar disasters in financial markets "before they lure in more unsuspecting victims."
It's perhaps most famous for a 2020 report on Nikola, a company in the electric-vehicle industry whose founder Hindenburg said made misleading claims to ink partnerships with top auto companies hungry to catch up to Tesla.
Among its allegations, Hindenburg accused Nikola of staging a video to calm skepticism about its truck, one that showed the vehicle cruising on a road. Hindenburg said the video was actually just showing the truck rolling down a hill after getting towed to the top.
For Nikola, quick scrutiny from the government and investors.
The company and its founder, Trevor Milton, received grand jury subpoenas from the U.S. Attorney's office for the Southern District of New York and the N.Y. County District Attorney's Office shortly after Hindenburg released its report.
The Securities and Exchange Commission also soon issued subpoenas to Nikola's directors.
Milton was convicted this past October of charges he deceived investors with exaggerated claims about his company's progress in producing zero-emission 18-wheel trucks fueled by electricity or hydrogen.
And Nikola in late 2021 agreed to pay $125 million to settle SEC charges that it defrauded investors by misleading them about its products, technical advancements, and commercial prospects.
It can make money. In its Adani report, it said that it had taken a "short position in Adani Group Companies" through bonds that trade in the U.S. and other investments that trade outside India.
It has made similar "short" bets against other companies it published unflattering reports on. A "short" trade is a way for someone to make money if an investment's price falls. Afterward, if the price of a company's stock or bonds falls because of the negative attention from the report, Hindenburg can profit.
Such short sellers have been criticized for unfairly pushing down prices of stocks with potentially unfounded allegations. But proponents also call them a healthy part of a stock market, keeping stock prices in check and preventing them from running too high.
The widow of a Quebec man who died competing in an Ironman competition is looking for answers.
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