Billionaire Gautam Adani’s conglomerate is testing lender demand for financings that may total more than $1 billion, the latest sign it’s slowly regaining the ability to raise funds six months after a US short seller caused a meltdown in its stocks and bonds. 

The group is in talks with Barclays Plc, Deutsche Bank AG and Standard Chartered Plc to borrow between $600 million and $750 million to refinance the debt taken on to finance its purchase of Ambuja Cements Ltd., Bloomberg reported Thursday. Separately, unit Adani New Industries Ltd. has raised $394 million via a trade finance facility from Barclays and Deutsche Bank for a solar module project. 

Adani Enterprises led most listed entities of the conglomerate higher on Friday and closed 1.4 per cent higher. 

Adani Group has started making a comeback in fundraising in recent months following an improvement in its debt metrics. The latest efforts to secure loan deals indicate the conglomerate is further restoring investor confidence after short seller Hindenburg accused it of widespread corporate malfeasance in January. 

Adani has vehemently denied the allegations, and the company’s shares and bonds have recouped some losses from an initial selloff that at one point had wiped out more than $150 billion of the group’s market value. 

In June, AdaniConneX Pvt sold $213 million of senior debt to finance data center construction, while Adani Enterprises Ltd. raised ₹1,250 crore through a local-currency bond sale this month.

The conglomerate is also in discussions with other lenders as it seeks to refinance as much as $3.8 billion of debt taken for its Ambuja acquisition. If executed, the loan of as much as $750 million would be part of that broader refinancing. The talks haven’t yet concluded, and the amounts may still change.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com