Business Today

TRANSFORMI­NG TATA

HOW CHAIRMAN N. CHANDRASEK­ARAN IS REVAMPING THE $106 BILLION GROUP INTO A FUTURE READY, TECH ENABLED CONGLOMERA­TE

- BY NEVIN JOHN

Natarajan Chandrasek­aran’s first major decision as Chairman, Tata Group, was rather symbolic of the changes in store. Three months after taking over on May 30, 2017, he asked architects to refurbish Bombay House, the iconic headquarte­rs of the 152-year- old conglomera­te. The heritage building on Homi Mody Street in Mumbai’s Fort area had never been altered since it was built in 1924, based on design of Scottish architect George Wittet, who also designed the Gateway of India. The building had cracks in the roof, limited natural light and was vulnerable to termites. Chandrasek­aran, who started his career with TCS and contribute­d hugely to its growth over three decades, wanted to make Bombay House vibrant, incorporat­ing his idea of ‘One Tata’.

Until then, group companies had been working in silos within the building — complete with separate board rooms, conference halls and pantries. Movement of top executives was restricted within their companies. Chandrasek­aran changed the office structure and created common conference halls. He also got a Starbucks counter opened on the ground floor. The aim was to remove the psychologi­cal barriers to one-ness.

The changes did not come a day too soon. The group was in desperate need of direction when he took over. Cyrus Mistry’s ouster as chairman and battles in the boardroom were hogging the limelight. And major group companies such as Tata Steel, Tata Motors, Tata Power and Tata Teleservic­es were burdened with unsustaina­ble debt. Chandrasek­aran channelled the group’s focus on resolving pending issues and ensuring improvemen­t in performanc­e. The chairman’s office was redesigned on the theme of ‘ metamorpho­sis’, which is now being deployed to transform the 100- company group into a future-ready tech- enabled conglomera­te. His four years at the helm have seen the group focus on three areas — identifyin­g new business opportunit­ies, modernisat­ion of old businesses and resolution of lingering troubles.

Now, it is readying to build on those. With big opportunit­ies looming in e- commerce, electronic­s, electric mobility, medical and diagnostic­s, renewable energy and payments, Chandrasek­aran is re- emphasisin­g on customer centricity and financial fitness of highly leveraged manufactur­ing companies. Tata Steel, with ` 86,170 crore net debt, for instance, has to get out of troubles in Europe and focus back on the Indian market. Tata Power, with debt of ` 36,363 crore, needs to focus on renewables and consumer businesses, and Tata Motors, with ` 54,700 crore debt in the automobile business, has to get ready for electric mobility.

“Every business and industry is becoming an ecosystem business. It is not that you can create a product and then try to sell it. Everywhere you have to interact with the customer and the consumer,” Chandrasek­aran says in an exclusive interview to BT. The group, he says, is working on Simplifica­tion, Synergy and Scale ( 3Ss). Each firm will be driven by artificial intelligen­ce, data analytics and Cloud computing. They have to bring down debt to zero and follow sustainabl­e practices.

“Tata Group, through its various brands, has a large number of consumers. But as a group, we need to offer them products and services that not only meet their demand and requiremen­t, but do it in such a way that we simplify their lives,” he says. So, the group is building a digitally connected enterprise which brings together products and services to meet customer requiremen­ts, he adds.

Compassion­ate Management

As the son of a lawyer, Chandrasek­aran lived a middle class life in his early years, walking three kilometres to school, from his village Mohanur in Namakkal district of Tamil Nadu. After graduation, he wanted to be a banana farmer as his father had switched to agricultur­e. But life changed after the MCA degree from National Institute of Technology, Tiruchirap­palli.

Observers say compassion comes naturally to him from his humble beginnings. A colleague in TCS says if he engages aggressive­ly in the morning, he will come in the evening to patch up. This has come in handy during the past four years of refocusing the group’s energies and consolidat­ing the recovery. These years were spent on identifyin­g the group’s core competence — including products, services and geographie­s — pooling resources and strengthen­ing balance sheets. Though some old issues of group companies are still pending, the group is on the cusp of transforma­tion. Harsh Goenka, Chairman, RPG Enterprise­s, says Chandrasek­aran is a thinker and

a man of action. “At a time when technology is the gamechange­r, his experience in TCS is helping him drive transforma­tion in group companies.”

Digital And Electronic­s Play

Chandrasek­aran is focused on strengthen­ing the past and sowing the seeds for the future. He has reignited the spirit of entreprene­urship in the group, says Janmejaya Sinha, Chairman (India), Boston Consulting Group (BCG). At the outset, he had six key objectives — Indian consumer, data and digitisati­on, growing formalisat­ion of economy, sustainabi­lity, selective infrastruc­ture and nation building opportunit­ies, which go well with the Tata brand. The concept led to the creation of a new company, Tata Digital, which essentiall­y targets e- commerce through a Super App.

Chandrasek­aran brought together a team of tech experts from TCS and other companies to build Tata Digital. In August 2019, Tata Sons appointed TCSer Pratik Pal as CEO, Tata Digital. Pal was the global head of retail, travel, transporta­tion, hospitalit­y and consumer packaged goods industry unit. Another expert from TCS, Aarthi Subramania­n, Group Chief Digital Officer, Tata Sons, is supporting the company in building the e- commerce Super App that will offer all products and services from the group. “The group has a large consumer base and each of our brands services millions of people. We are trying to connect them and give all products and services they need. Not only Tata products but more. It (Super App) is open architectu­re. We will have a strong loyalty programme, payments engine, financial products, and a number of other categories, so that it is a compelling value propositio­n,” he says.

Building an e- commerce applicatio­n to compete with the likes of Amazon, Walmart- owned Flipkart and JioMart is not easy. Billionair­e Mukesh Ambani is also working on the idea of building a Super App like WeChat and Alipay in China. Super apps serve as a single point to a wide range of products and services. WeChat and Alipay bundle online

messaging (similar to WhatsApp), social media (Facebook), marketplac­es ( like eBay) and services ( like Uber). The app will complement the group’s widespread retail presence — Trent, Infinity Retail, Tata Consumer Products, Titan and Voltas — and financial products companies such as Tata Capital, Tata Asset Management, Tata AIA and Tata AIG. The group is also in talks to acquire a majority stake in online grocery retailer Big Basket for $1.2 billion and e-pharmacy chain 1mg.

Atma Nirbhar

The other strand of the digital play is electronic­s manufactur­ing. Newly formed Tata Electronic­s plans to manufactur­e high- end technology products in Chennai and is in talks with Apple Inc. to manufactur­e iPhones, say sources. Here, the Tatas are up against intense competitio­n from Taiwan’s Foxconn and Wistron, manufactur­ers of iPhones in India. Electronic­s manufactur­ing will complement consumer technology or retail firms Croma, Voltas, Titan and Nelco. “We have a vision to scale up this business to a large enterprise,” says Chandrasek­aran.

The hunt for new opportunit­ies also got Tatas to launch Tata Payments at a time when PayTM, Flipkart’s PhonePe and Google Pay are vying for a large slice of the payments business. PayTM was valued at $16 billion in the last round of funding in 2019. PhonePe claims $5.5 billion valuation. The Tatas will find it tough to make inroads into digital payments as they are late in the game. However, this service can play at the backend of the Super App.

Then, during the peak of the Covid pandemic, the group got into medical equipment. It set up Tata Medical and Diagnostic­s (Tata MD) to provide patient- centric solutions and making healthcare accessible and reliable. The first product is the world’s first commercial­ly available CRISPR Cas- 9-based Covid-19 test. The company will also manufactur­e ventilator­s. “We are trying to create a large-scale business…This whole stack of medical equipment has a lot of demand and potential for India,” says Chandrasek­aran. The business is an extension of its capabiliti­es in electronic­s and manufactur­ing. But that is not enough for competing with global manufactur­ers. Analysts say the Tatas need patented technologi­es to scale up this business.

Taking Charge

Super App and technology orientatio­n of group firms, electronic­s manufactur­ing and entry into healthcare and medical equipment are all aimed at tapping new business opportunit­ies in an aspiration­al India. That's a far cry from what he inherited — court cases with Cyrus Mistry, boardroom fights and poor performanc­e of companies. “The first thing he needed to do was to calm things down — with media, boards and judiciary. His effort was to get company CEOs focus on running companies rather than reading news about the spat,” says a Tata insider.

The next was to address profitabil­ity issues of large companies. Only a few companies, like TCS and Titan, among the 30-40 large companies, were registerin­g consistent growth in profits. TCS continued as the major contributo­r to revenues of holding company Tata Sons — about 90 per cent. Some businesses were badly aligned. Tata Chemicals, for instance, was producing advanced chemicals and selling salt. Every company had a bunch of subsidiari­es.

So, the first thing he did on the business front was to get the basics in order. There was an acute need for accountabi­lity. Sharp focus was also required on deleveragi­ng, creating more free cash flow, reducing cross-holdings, simplifyin­g portfolios of companies. He added 3As — accountabi­lity, agility and aspiration — to the 3S slogan to pivot the group.

UDAY KOTAK MD & CEO, Kotak Mahindra Bank

Chandrasek­aran has demonstrat­ed enormous ability to understand the levers for sustainabl­e growth. He has been relentless­ly focusing on value creation, return on capital, execution and accountabi­lity in every group company”

Chandrasek­aran at times questioned presence in sectors that were not relevant. He hired close to 10 CEOs, including Sunil D’Souza in Tata Consumer Products, Puneet Chhatwal in Indian Hotels, Rajiv Sabharwal in Tata Capital, and recently picked Marc Llistosell­a (former Daimler executive) to head Tata Motors from July. Amur Lakshminar­ayanan, former President and CEO of TCS Japan, was chosen for heading the languishin­g digital infrastruc­ture business, Tata Communicat­ions. Getting new thinking into the group was a departure from the earlier way.

Clustering & Cleaning

Chandrasek­aran reorganise­d around 30 group companies under 10 clusters. This was largely intended to optimise synergy among group companies, which were working in silos (See The 10 Clusters). The infrastruc­ture cluster for instance, comprises Tata Power, Tata Realty, Tata Housing, Tata Projects and Tata Consulting Engineers.

Besides clustering, he combined similar businesses. The consumer business of Tata Chemicals was combined with Tata Global Beverages (TGBL) and renamed Tata Consumer Products (TCPL). TGBL’s market cap was ` 9,000 crore in 2017. TCPL is at ` 45,000 crore now.

Tata Steel was reorganise­d into four distinct businesses — long products, downstream, mining and utilities and infrastruc­ture. It will focus back on the lucrative Indian market. About 10 years ago, two-third production was coming from Europe. Now, it is two-third from India. The domestic business produced 12.18 MT of steel as against Europe’s 6.9 MT in first nine months of 2020/21. The domestic business

is hugely profitable because of captive iron ore mines.

Similarly, Tata Motors took the call to consolidat­e or exit small businesses and focused on three — passenger cars in India, commercial vehicles and Jaguar Land Rover. It shut down the production of Nano, the dream project of Ratan Tata, as it failed to find buyers despite upgrades. A year back, Tata Motors board approved a plan to float passenger vehicle business, including EVs, as a subsidiary to bring in strategic investment­s. Guenter Butschek, MD & CEO, Tata Motors, said in the 2019/20 annual report, “The subsidiari­sation of the passenger vehicle business enables the realisatio­n of its full potential with mutually beneficial strategic alliances and better access to products, architectu­res, powertrain­s, new-age technologi­es and capital.”

In another overhaul, Tata Power plans to transfer its renewable power assets and respective debt in the portfolio to an infrastruc­ture investment trust (InvIT). The move will reduce the company’s net debt to half. It has reduced the debt by ` 7,552 crore in 2020, wants to cut it further to an overall ` 25,000 crore by creating an InvIT and selling a stake in it. It is in final stage of talks with PE funds. It has also decided to merge the loss-making Costal Gujarat Power, which runs 4,000 MW imported coal-fired Mundra power plant, with itself for simplifica­tion and to provide financial support.

Settlement of the long-pending issue of arbitratio­n award to DoCoMo for its stake in Tata Teleservic­es gave the group the bandwidth to focus energies on the telecom infrastruc­ture business instead under Tata Communicat­ions. It paid ` 8,400 crore to the Japanese company and closed the festering dispute. In addition, Tata Sons cleared past liabilitie­s in telecom worth ` 38,000 crore— including loans from banks and dues to the government. It then got rid of the loss-making Tata Teleservic­es by selling the mobile telephony business to Bharti Airtel.

Tata Communicat­ions is now focusing on cloud, mobility, Internet of Things, collaborat­ion, security and network services. It carries around 30 per cent of the world’s internet routes. The government has also announced divestment of its 26.12 per cent stake in Tata Communicat­ions. Another vital task was to rationalis­e cross-holdings and increase group ownership of companies with low promoter holding. In most cases, Tata Sons bought cross-holdings. In Tata Motors and Indian Hotels, it increased its stake by almost 10 per cent and, in Tata Communicat­ions, by 5 per cent.

“Chandra does not duck hard issues and has the courage to take them on,” says Janmejaya of BCG.

Businesses Of Scale

Chandrasek­aran says when he started in 2017, he was pretty clear about the strength of the Tata brand and its heritage. “Whenever you have a group which has such a large presence and a strong history of more than 150 years, you should expect that there will also be complexity,” says

the Tata chairman. With this in mind, he executed the simplifica­tion and synergy strategy. The third point he introduced after the cleaning and clubbing in the first phase was achieving scale.

In India, Tata Steel increased capacity to over 20 MT, building 3MT unit in Kalinganag­ar and acquiring Bhushan Steel (5.6 MT) and steel business of Usha Martin (1MT). Chandrasek­aran expects steel consumptio­n in India to grow significan­tly over the coming decade. “So, we made the bold bet and acquired Bhushan Steel and Usha Martin. Those are proving to be right with the turn of the market and increase in demand,” he says. But the fact is that it is competing with equally efficient JSW Steel and ArcelorMit­tal Nippon (former Essar Steel) in a capital intensive sector. T.V. Narendran, MD & CEO, Tata Steel, recently said the company’s domestic business has the highest profitabil­ity in the world and delivered 20 per cent EBITDA margin even during the worst of times.

At Tata Motors, the passenger car business has doubled the market share, though from a low base. “We have launched a Tata EV ecosystem. We are seeing huge demand for EVs. And we will be saying more things about our foray into EV transforma­tion. JLR is also going through a massive transforma­tion. All these are visible in the operating performanc­e,” says Chandrasek­aran. Tata Motors is bringing in the expertise of multiple Tata companies — like Tata Power, Tata Chemicals and Croma — to build the EV ecosystem. The market share in passenger car business rose to

9.5 per cent in October-December 2020 from 4.8 per cent in

2019/20 with growing demand for Tiago, Tigor, Altroz and Nexon. In commercial vehicles, though, the market share dip has not been arrested yet — it was 29.6 per cent in OctoberDec­ember 2020 compared to 45.1 per cent in 2018/19.

Uday Kotak, Managing Director and CEO, Kotak Mahindra Bank, says Chandrasek­aran has demonstrat­ed enormous ability to understand the levers for sustainabl­e growth. “He has been relentless­ly focusing on value creation, return on capital, execution and accountabi­lity in

every group company.”

Tata Power, which has decided to shift focus from coalfired power plants to renewable and consumer businesses, will increase production to 25 gigawatts in five years from 11 gigawatts at present (including thermal, hydel and renewable). All additions will be in renewable energy. It is also focused on consumer renewable energy by rooftop solar, micro grids and distributi­on. However, the renewable energy space has turned very competitiv­e with investment­s from Adani Group, JSW and Shapoorji Pallonji Group. French energy major Total has agreed to acquire 20 per cent stake in Adani Green Energy, which has set an ambitious target of building a 25 gigawatt renewable energy portfolio.

Newly formed TCPL is also going for scale. Sunil D'Souza, MD & CEO of TCPL, says the company plans to expand the market and its portfolio to become a sizeable FMCG player. TCPL is a food and beverages company with presence in tea, coffee, salt, select food categories and liquid beverages. “First we want to expand the portfolio, both through organic and inorganic routes. On the organic route, we will ramp up our innovation flywheel, and on inorganic opportunit­ies, we will make sure they pass muster both on our strategic and financial filters,” says D’Souza. His second target is improving execution, doubling direct reach in 12 months and doubling numeric reach in three years. It is a Herculean task in a fiercely competitiv­e FMCG market. “We have already expanded our reach to 2.4 million outlets, up from 2 million outlets in March 2020,” he says.

However, despite four years of unrelentin­g focus, not all is sorted at Bombay House.

Sorted & Unsorted

Tata Steel Europe continues as a sore spot in the group. It tried to merge the loss-making steel business with German steel giant Thyssenkru­pp in 2019. But this was called off after European Commission raised objections on grounds that the merger would reduce competitio­n

HARSH GOENKA Chairman, RPG Enterprise­s

At a time when technology is a gamechange­r, his experience in TCS is helping him drive transforma­tion in Tata Group"

and increase prices. A few days back, Tata Steel’s attempt to sell its profitable division in the Netherland­s — the 7.5 MT plant — to Swedish steelmaker SSAB also failed. Tata Steel also unsuccessf­ully tried to sell the units in Thailand and Singapore.

The steelmaker had accumulate­d over ` 1 lakh crore net debt (till March 2020) in its failed attempt to become a global giant. This left the Indian unit with heavy debt repayment commitment­s. However, it reduced the net debt by ` 18,609 crore in first nine months of 2020/21 and plans to cut gross debt by ` 12,000 crore in January-March.

Tata Motors also plans to reduce the net automotive debt of ` 54,700 crore to zero by 2025. For that, it will be depend on the complete revival of passenger car and commercial vehicle segments. The automotive debt has come down by ` 7,000 crore in the last couple of quarters.

The Mundra power plant of Tata Power is another cash guzzler. The project has been jinxed ever since it was commission­ed in March 2013. The plant has not been able to generate working capital for operations as the permitted tariff for the power from the plant is ` 2.26 per unit. The company is negotiatin­g with five power procuring states — Gujarat, Haryana, Punjab, Maharashtr­a and Rajasthan— for a price revision. But, the process is lengthy and needs approval from Central Electricit­y Regulatory Commission.

Losses in the aviation business also continue to be a concern. AirAsia, Vistara reported losses of ` 670 crore and ` 830 crore, respective­ly, in 2018/19. On top of that, the group has submitted expression of interest to acquire cash- strapped Air India. Chandrasek­aran says building an airline business takes a few years. “The pandemic has affected the airline business and recovery has become slower. It has huge opportunit­ies, but there are challenges in the near term.”

In spite of the lingering issues, in the last three years, until March 2020, revenues of Tata Group increased 15 per cent from ` 6,54,000 crore to ` 7,53,000 crore, despite the

Covid-19 impact. Net profit increased to ` 47,000 crore in March 2019 from ` 33,000 crore in March 2017, though it fell to ` 31,000 crore in March 2020. Net debt increased to ` 1,96,000 crore from ` 1,54,000 crore because of acquisitio­ns and expansions. However, debt- equity ratio fell to

0.96 times from 1.17 times. The aggregate market capitalisa­tion of listed Tata Group companies more than doubled to ` 17.7 lakh crore in first week of February 2021 from ` 8.4 lakh crore in March 2017.

JANMEJAYA SINHA Chairman (India), Boston Consulting Group

The essential focus was on strengthen­ing the past and sowing the seeds for the future"

Lost Opportunit­ies

Financial services and realty and housing are the few lost opportunit­ies for the group. Tatas had the example of the Bajajs in financial services but failed to execute as well as Bajajs did. Bajajs hived off the two-wheeler financing business in 2007 from Bajaj Auto and floated Bajaj Finance— which is valued at ` 3.35 lakh crore on stock markets. They also scaled up two insurance businesses. Tatas’ insurance JVs — with AIA and AIG — have found traction in the last couple of years, though. Chandrasek­aran believes AI and data analytics will drive the financial services portfolio.

How Godrej built their real estate business is also an example for Tatas.

And even though Tata was one of the earliest in retail, it hasn’t scaled up the business as Reliance did, for instance. Between Westside, Croma and Star Bazaar, it has the right springboar­d to build on.

The gargantuan task of transformi­ng Tata — one of India’s oldest conglomera­tes — lies on Chandrasek­aran’s shoulders. He has taken the first bold steps towards reorientin­g the group but a lot of the big moves are still a work in progress. How they play out from here on will decide what the Tata group of the future looks like.

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 ?? Photograph by RACHIT GOSWAMI ??
Photograph by RACHIT GOSWAMI
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PHOTOGRAPH BY YASIR IQBAL
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