Business Standard

Tata defence cluster rejig likely by June

All related group businesses to come under one roof

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE

The Tata group will soon start the process of hiving off all the defence-related businesses housed in various operating companies into a vertical under Tata Sons and conclude the process by June 2018, said sources aware of the plans.

These businesses will come under the newly created defence and infrastruc­ture cluster, a key part of Tata Sons Chairman N Chandrasek­aran’s strategy of creating clusters to build a leaner organisati­on, which will focus on defence opportunit­ies.

Tata Advanced Systems, Tata Advanced Materials, and some businesses of Tata Power Company and Tata Motors are part of the group’s defence portfolio. Among these, Tata Power’s strategic engineerin­g division has already initiated a restructur­ing process, according to sources.

A Tata Sons spokespers­on declined to comment.

The process of combining these businesses into one consolidat­ed entity has been underway since early 2017, when Chandrasek­aran took charge as Tata Sons chairman, and has gained momentum since Banmali Agrawala, former South Asia head of GE, was handpicked by Chandrasek­aran to head the defence and infrastruc­ture vertical.

“So far, all the group companies have been pursuing their defence plans and sought collaborat­ions independen­tly. Therefore, there has been some reluctance to let go of the commitment­s,” said a person familiar with the plans.

The move, one of the three people added, will help the Tata group pitch itself as a large consolidat­ed entity for large-scale defence procuremen­t projects such as government’s strategic partnershi­p (SP) programme. While it is not clear whether this will be a division of Tata Sons or a separate subsidiary, a combined organisati­on will also have the financials to support bidding for large contracts.

With some of the defence-related businesses being part of listed companies, the hiving off or demerger process would require the go-ahead from the board and shareholde­rs besides requisite statutory approvals.

Agrawala and his team are now looking at optimising resources, capital expenditur­e, and people, besides achieving scale, which is the single-most important factor in the defence business, said the persons cited earlier.

The strategic partnershi­p model, made public in May 2017, seeks to identify a few Indian private companies as strategic partners who would initially collaborat­e with a few shortliste­d foreign original equipment manufactur­ers (OEMs) to create bigticket military platforms. In the initial phase, the selection of such partners would be confined to select segments including fighter aircraft, helicopter­s, submarines, and armoured fighting vehicles and main battle tanks.

Laxman Kumar Behera, research fellow at Delhi-based Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, said while under the new strategic partnershi­p model, one had seen policy simplifica­tion, it was yet to translate into actual contracts. “The next logical step by the government should be to start awarding contracts,” he said, pointing out that so far with the exception of one contract awarded to Larsen & Toubro, no large contracts had been awarded to private sector companies.

Chandra, who completes a year in office on February 21, has been emphasisin­g on the need to consolidat­e the Tata group, which comprises 100-odd 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.

At some point, the company would need to take a call on which are the business segments within defence that are attractive and need to be deepened and how the group would leverage its strength to get the adequate return on investment. “The ambition is to grow the overall defence portfolio, which has a minuscule share in the group’s overall turnover, in multiples,” said one of the persons quoted above.

Defence has been an area that the Tatas have been involved in for many years, but now the opportunit­y is larger because of the government’s make in India programme, said H V Harish, partner at Grant Thornton. “In defense contractin­g and bidding, the scale of the company is important. If you are a ~1-billion company, you cannot bid for a ~80 billion order,” he said. Given the enormous potential, the defence business can become the next TCS for Tata group he added.

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