Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

MISTRY FAMILY SAYS ‘TIME TO SEPARATE’ FROM TATA GROUP

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NEW DELHI: The billionair­e Mistry family, the largest minority shareholde­r of the Tata Group, said it needs to separate its interests after India’s biggest conglomera­te took steps to block the family’s attempt to borrow money against Tata shares.

Tata Sons Pvt. informed the Supreme Court on Tuesday that it’s open to buying out the 18% stake owned by the Mistry family’s cash-strapped Shapoorji Pallonji Group if the latter needed to raise money for paying maturing debt. The SP Group instead wanted to borrow funds using the shares as collateral, a move Tata considers as potentiall­y risky .

MUMBAI: The billionair­e Mistry family, the largest minority shareholde­r of the Tata group, said it needs to separate its interests after India’s biggest conglomera­te took steps to block the family’s attempt to borrow money against Tata shares.

Tata Sons Pvt. informed the Supreme Court Tuesday that it’s open to buying out the 18% stake owned by the Mistry family’s cash-strapped Shapoorji Pallonji group if the latter needed to raise money for paying maturing debt. The SP group instead wanted to borrow funds using the shares as collateral, a move Tata considers as potentiall­y risky because the securities may end up falling in the hands of unfriendly investors. “The action by Tata Sons to block this crucial fund raise, without any heed for the collateral consequenc­es, is the latest demonstrat­ion of their vindictive mind-set,” the SP group said in a statement late Tuesday. “It is with a heavy heart that the Mistry family believes that a separation of interests would best serve all stakeholde­r groups.”

It didn’t specify what any separation would entail.

A representa­tive for Tata Sons declined to comment. The acrimoniou­s divorce between the two groups would end a 70-year partnershi­p that has seen Pallonji Mistry, the 91-year-old patriarch of the family, become a billionair­e and help the Tata group swell to a $113 billion software-to-cars empire. The Tata stake accounts for about a third of Pallonji’s $22.5 billion wealth, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­e’s Index. His son, Cyrus, has been locked in a bitter legal fight with Tata since he was ousted as chairman of Tata Sons in a 2016 boardroom coup.

The Supreme Court on Tuesday barred the Mistry group from pledging or selling any Tata shares until October 28, when it starts hearing final arguments in the case. Mistry’s empire, which includes real estate, infrastruc­ture and home appliances, was in preliminar­y discussion­s to borrow as much as $1 billion by pledging a part of its Tata Sons stake to pay maturing debt after asset sales stalled amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, Bloomberg News reported in March, citing people familiar with the matter.

“The Shapoorji Pallonji group is in a financial mess,” said Arun Kejriwal, director at KRIS, an investment advisory firm in Mumbai.

 ?? HT ?? SP group patriarch Pallonji Mistry’s son Cyrus (centre) has been locked in a bitter legal fight with the Tata group since 2016.
HT SP group patriarch Pallonji Mistry’s son Cyrus (centre) has been locked in a bitter legal fight with the Tata group since 2016.

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