Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

In 2 years of Chandra, Tata’s m-cap grows 21%, led by TCS

- Ashwin Ramarathin­am and Nasrin Sultana

MUMBAI : Investors have reposed faith in the ability of Tata Sons Ltd chairman N Chandrasek­aran to steer India’s biggest conglomera­te to a healthier future in the aftermath of the controvers­y over the ouster of its former boss Cyrus Mistry.

The overall market value of Tata group companies has risen by about 21% in the two years since Chandrasek­aran took charge as chairman on February 21, 2017.

Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd (TCS), the company that Chandrasek­aran ran for about eight years before he was named group chairman, led the growth in market value.

Market capitaliza­tion of all 28 listed Tata group companies rose to ₹10.88 lakh crore as of February 12, according to corporate data provider Capitaline. Of the top 19 conglomera­tes, the market value of six had declined during this period. TCS alone accounts for more than 70% of the group’s market value.

The software services company’s market capitaliza­tion rose 39% to ₹7.69 lakh crore in the twoyear period. Excluding it, the picture looks less rosy, with the Tata group’s market value declining 7.35% in the two-year period, underperfo­rming the 19% gain in the benchmark Sensex.

Among group companies, the shares of Tata Motors Ltd were the worst performers under Chandrasek­aran’s leadership. With a current market cap of ₹43,728.9 crore, Tata Motors has plunged 59% in the period. The auto maker has been under pressure because of its British luxury unit Jaguar Land Rover (JLR).

Tata Motors posted the biggest quarterly loss in India’s corporate history in the December quarter owing to an impairment charge for JLR, following which its shares plunged as much as 22.4% on February 8, the auto maker’s biggest single-day drop since February 1993, which led to many brokerages slashing its target price.

Tata Motors reported a consolidat­ed loss of ₹26,993 crore after its biggest ever write-off of £3.10 billion for JLR. The write-off has

been attributed to slowing sales in China and disruption­s from a shift towards eco-friendly hybrid and electric vehicles.

In terms of market capitaliza­tion, TCS is the second most valued stock in the country after Reliance Industries.

“Our optimism on TCS is based on strong growth visibility backed by robust deal bookings and strong deal pipeline, scale and growth leadership in digital with increasing penetratio­n in large accounts, revival in BFSI (banking, financial services and insurance) vertical and better outlook supported by reduction in captive intensity, and efficient capital allocation,” HDFC securities institutio­nal equities said in a January 11 note.

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