Khaleej Times

Tata-Mistry feud deepens

- Bhuma Shrivastav­a

mumbai — Tata Group’s feud with one of India’s richest families deepened after the country’s biggest conglomera­te moved to change its holding company’s legal status to one that would restrict the Mistry family’s ability to sell its stake to external investors.

Shareholde­rs of the closely held company, Tata Sons Ltd, are scheduled to vote September 21 on changing its registrati­on to a private limited entity rather than a public one, Pradipta Bagchi, a spokesman for the group, said by telephone on Friday. The Mistry family plans to vote against the proposal, according to a letter to Tata Sons seen by Bloomberg.

The move comes almost a year after patriarch Ratan Tata ousted Cyrus Mistry as chairman of the $105 billion cars-to-software group, sparking a corporate showdown that has yet to fully conclude because Mistry’s family still owns more than 18 per cent of the holding company.

The proposal to alter Tata Sons’ status amounts to “oppression of the minority interests,” the Mistry family’s investment fund wrote in a September 14 letter to the holding company.

“The true effect of converting the status of Tata Sons into a private company is to introduce/reintroduc­e restrictio­ns on transferab­ility of shares,” Cyrus Investment­s said in the letter. “We urge you to withdraw the AGM notice and the proposal.”

The Tata Sons proposal requires at least 75 per cent of shareholde­rs to pass, Bagchi said.

Tata, founded in 1868, named Natarajan Chandrasek­aran to take the helm in January after a feud between Ratan Tata’s allies in the company and Mistry over the latter’s strategy of paring back the empire built through more than a decade of acquisitio­ns.

As Mistry looked for ways to pare the conglomera­te’s debt-laden sprawl, growth lagged. At the same time, Chandrasek­aran helped turn the group’s software maker Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd into a profit machine, boosting its market value more than 10 times since 2009. Tata Sons is currently a public limited company. That means the Mistry family could legally sell its stake to one of Tata’s rivals.

“This means less transparen­cy, less flexibilit­y,” said Sandeep Parekh, managing partner at Mumbai-based Finsec Law Advisors over phone.

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 ?? Bloomberg ?? The giant Indian cars-tosoftware group is worth $105 billion. —
Bloomberg The giant Indian cars-tosoftware group is worth $105 billion. —

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