N Chandrasekaran 
Business

Tata Sons digs in heels on Chandra’s tenure extension

At a board meeting on Tuesday, Tata Sons deferred a decision on Chandrasekaran’s continuation, signalling potential differences within the holding company of the conglomerate.

Agencies

NEW DELHI: The deferral of Natarajan Chandrasekaran’s re-appointment for a third term as Chairman of Tata Sons has raised questions over a unanimous resolution passed last year by trustees of Tata Trusts recommending an extension of his tenure, according to group observers.

At a board meeting on Tuesday, Tata Sons deferred a decision on Chandrasekaran’s continuation, signalling potential differences within the holding company of the conglomerate.

Tata Trusts Chairman Noel Tata is learnt to have set several conditions for Chandrasekaran’s re-appointment, leading to the postponement. He reportedly raised concerns over losses in certain group companies, including Air India, and flagged risks associated with heavy capital expenditure in semiconductor and battery ventures. He is also understood to have sought assurances that Tata Sons would not pursue a stock market listing.

“It definitely raises questions on the validity of the unanimous resolution passed by the trustees of Tata Trusts last year recommending a third term for Chandrasekaran,” a person familiar with the matter said, adding, “Can a nominated director of Tata Trusts go against the unanimous decision of the trustees?”

Tata Trusts did not respond to queries on whether the resolution had been revoked or whether a nominee director on the Tata Sons board could unilaterally diverge from the trustees’ decision.

However, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said the resolution “clearly stands” and was taken unanimously

after due deliberation. “What Noel Tata did was within his capacity as a director of Tata Sons and was not necessarily against the resolution of the trustees. The resolution will be implemented in due course,” the source said.

Tata Trusts collectively hold a majority 66 per cent stake in Tata Sons, which controls the over $180 billion Tata Group with interests spanning automobiles, steel, software, aviation and emerging sectors such as semiconductors.

Last year, infighting in Tata Trusts had reached the government with the top brass of the Tata group, including Noel Tata and N Chandrasekaran, meeting Union Home Minister Amit Shah and Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.

Subsequently, government told the trusts to resolve the issue amicably and not let their differences spill in the public, considering the significance of the Tata Group on India’s economy.

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