Business Standard

RoC NOD FOR TATA SONS TO GO PRIVATE

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE

Tata Sons, the holding company of the Tata group, has received clearance from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) to change its status from a deemed public limited company to a private limited one, according to the certificat­e of incorporat­ion filed by the firm. A Tata Sons spokespers­on declined to comment. The move is a big setback for the Shapoorji Pallonji Mistry family, which has been involved in a legal slugfest with Tata Sons since December 2016. Cyrus Mistry was removed as chairman of Tata Sons two months earlier. Most importantl­y, it will effectivel­y restrict the Mistry family’s ability to sell its stake in the Tata group holding company to external entities. The Mistry family firms —Cyrus Investment­s and Sterling Investment — jointly own 18.4 per cent in Tata Sons’ equity capital. Shareholde­rs of the Tata Trusts-controlled Tata Sons passed a resolution favouring the conversion of its status at its annual general meeting on September 22, 2017. SHALLY SETH MOHILE writes

Tata Sons, the holding company of the Tata group, has received a clearance from the Registrar of Companies (RoC) to change its status from a deemed public limited company to a private limited one, according to the certificat­e of incorporat­ion filed by the firm.

A Tata Sons spokespers­on declined to comment.

The move is a big setback for the Shapoorji Pallonji Mistry family, which has been involved in a legal slugfest with Tata Sons since December 2016. Cyrus Mistry was removed as chairman of Tata Sons two months earlier. Most importantl­y, it will effectivel­y restrict the Mistry family’s ability to sell its stake in the Tata group holding company to external entities.

The Mistry family firms — Cyrus Investment­s and Sterling Investment — jointly own 18.4 per cent in Tata Sons’ equity capital. Shareholde­rs of the Tata Trusts-controlled Tata Sons had passed a resolution favouring the conversion of its status at its annual general meeting on September 21, 2017. It was deemed to be a public company in 1976 on the grounds of turnover according to Section 43(A) of the Companies Act, 1956.

Tata Sons got RoC’s nod on August 6, just a day before the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) in Delhi started

hearing the Mistry family’s appeal against the July 9 order of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), Mumbai. On Wednesday, the appellate tribunal heard a petition filed by Cyrus Investment­s seeking a stay on the conversion while challengin­g the July order.

In response to the appeal, the NCLAT directed Tata Sons to file an affidavit and written responses by August 10 regarding its conversion into a private limited company from a deemed public company. The twojudge NCLAT bench, headed by Justice S J Mukhopadhy­ay, said it would hear arguments on August 14 after all documents related to the conversion are presented by Tata Sons in a proper manner and not as “loose documents”.

“Private limited companies are a lot less transparen­t. Therefore, it won’t be good for other shareholde­rs if holding companies become private,” said Sandeep Parekh, managing partner at Finsec Law Advisors. While such a move would ease regulatory burden on the holding company, it would restrict share transfer rights of the minority shareholde­rs, he added.

Also, under the Companies Act, a private limited firm requires a minimum of two and a maximum of 15 directors with liabilitie­s.

Considerin­g Tata Sons has got a formal nod from the RoC, it can conduct itself like a private limited company absent a stay, said Parekh. However, this can easily be reversed once the appellate tribunal has heard the parties on merits.

One of the consequenc­es of being a private limited company is restricted borrowing, pointed out Amit Tandon, managing director of Institutio­nal Investor Advisory Services, a proxy firm. “It will have an impact on the borrowing side as large lenders like Life Insurance Corporatio­n do not lend to private limited companies,” said Tandon.

Paving the way for the change, the NCLT bench comprising B S V Prakash Kumar and V Nallasen-apathy, in its July 9 order, had justified Tata Sons’ move. The change in status, Kumar said, would not be tantamount to oppression against the Mistry family — the largest shareholde­r in Tata Sons after Tata Trusts — because the law itself directs the company to become private according to Section 43A (2A) of the Companies Act, 1956.

Under the Companies Act, 2013, there is no provision for a deemed public company. It only has two classes: public company and private. Tata Sons, he added, was at liberty to become a private company.

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