Business Standard

Tata housing, realty firms to merge

Sanjay Dutt likely to head new vertical; merger a result of Tata group chairman Chandra’s cluster vision

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE & RAGHAVENDR­A KAMATH

Tata Sons’ subsidiari­es Tata Housing Developmen­t Company and Tata Realty and Infrastruc­ture (TRIL) will be merged, as part of the consolidat­ion at the group under the leadership of Chairman N Chandrasek­aran.

Sources said Sanjay Dutt, currently chief executive at Ascendas-Singbridge, will head the vertical comprising realty and infrastruc­ture. He will report to Banmali Agrawala, president, infrastruc­ture, defence, and aerospace, Tata Sons.

Tata Sons, however, refused to comment.

The merger of the two entities, already in the works, will be concluded over the next three months, said a source.

Brotin Banerjee, managing director and chief executive of Tata Housing, resigned on February 7, citing personal reasons. One of the youngest CEOs in the group, Banerjee was credited with transformi­ng Tata Housing from a loss-making to a profit-making company.

“He (Chandrasek­aran) is moving at a fast pace and concentrat­ing on the scale and relevance of the group. When you grow bigger, you get better talent,” said a Tata group executive, referring to Chandra’s cluster approach.

“Whatever changes are happening — some people leaving, some joining — will bring in newer thinking, which is good for the group,” he added.

With a presence across all consumer segments, ranging from value to luxury housing, Tata Housing has close to 70 million square feet of projects at various stages of developmen­t. It also has a pipeline of projects of 19 million square feet, according to the company’s website.

TRIL is a decade-old company, set up to pursue the group’s interests in infrastruc­ture and real estate projects. While Tata Housing has focused on residentia­l projects, TRIL’s forte has been large-scale commercial projects, such as roads and highways.

Chandra will complete a year in office on February 21. He has been emphasisin­g the need to consolidat­e the Tata group, which has over 100 companies. Defence and infrastruc­ture is one of the several verticals identified by Chandra as he seeks to make the group companies more focused and agile, and drive growth under the “One Tata” approach. The other clusters include financial services, informatio­n technology, consumer-facing businesses, and travel and hospitalit­y.

“Both Tata Housing and TRIL are very big corporate entities in their own right. It’s like one plus one becoming three, if you were to merge housing and realty,” said Anuj Puri, chairman, Anarock Property Consultant­s.

Most of the other Indian developers, including Oberoi Realty, Godrej Properties, and Prestige Estate Projects, do both residentia­l and commercial projects, added Puri, pointing out that it offered synergy in the business network space — in human resource, legal, finance, etc. Even in constructi­on contracts, they get very large volumes.

“There was no reason for them to operate as different entities,” said another analyst.

In an interview published in the December 2017 edition of Tata Review, the group’s in-house magazine, Chandrasek­aran said even as he was sharply focused on returns and capital allocation, it do not mean the Tata group would exit a business that does not meet its targets.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India