Business Standard

Agrawal to take charge of Tata insurance JVs

- ABHINEET KUMAR

Saurabh Agrawal, group chief financial officer (CFO) at Tata Sons, is set to become the chairman of Tata AIA Life Insurance and Tata AIG General Insurance, replacing group veteran Ishaat Hussain who retires next week after turning 70.

Agrawal, a seasoned investment banker, is one of the key hires of Tata Sons Chairman N Chandrasek­aran, popularly known as Chandra, since he took over the reins of the $104-billion Tata group in February.

“Agrawal will be taking over the leadership roles in finance companies of the group,” said a Tata group insider familiar with the plans. As group CFO, Agrawal has been entrusted with the task of restructur­ing the group, which has over 100 operating companies from salt to software. He has been asked to look into the cross-holdings and reduce them. There is also a possibilit­y of divesting some companies that are not on the group’s priority list.

Prior to his current role which he took up last month, Agrawal was head of strategy at Aditya Birla Group where he oversaw the Idea-Vodafone merger and the buyout of Jaypee group’s cement assets by UltraTech, besides the merger of group firms Grasim and Aditya Birla Nuvo, in his short stint of about a year.

Agrawal has had a long stint with DSP Merrill Lynch, where he had worked on initial public offering of Tata Consultanc­y Services.

There he had the opportunit­y to work with Chandra, too. Then he moved to Standard Chartered Bank before joining Aditya Birla Group.

Hussain is also directorfi­nance on the Tata Sons board — a position that will fall vacant with his retirement. It may take some time before his replacemen­t on the board is finalised.

Hussain joined the board of a Tata Steel associate, Indian Tube Company, in 1981. In 1983, he moved to the Tata Steel board when the associate was merged with the parent. He served as directorfi­nance at Tata Steel for a decade before moving to Tata Sons as executive director in 1999. He became directorfi­nance at Tata Sons in July 2000 and, after over 12 years of service that saw the group increasing internatio­nal footprint through global acquisitio­ns such as Corus and Jaguar Land Rover, he moved to a non-executive position.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India