One of India's oldest and 
most trusted brands of all time was recently in one of the biggest 
financial feud with its life long business partners. I am indeed talking
 about the Tata vs Mistry dispute. In the last month, Tata Sons and the 
construction giant Shapoorji Pallonji Group were on the verge of 
fighting another bitter courtroom battle that would have further 
strained their relationship. Let's see where does this dispute 
originates from and what are the highlights of it.
 The
 Tata empire is massive and its structure is quite complicated. At the 
top is Tata Sons which is the organization which holds together all of 
the Tata's ventures - Tata Steel, Tata Motors, Tata Consultancy Services
 (TCS), etc.
"Tata Sons", in turn, primarily belongs to two large instituions.
- Tata Trusts - a group of charitable organizations set up by Sir Ratanji Jamsetji Tata. They own about 55% of the company and..
-  The Shapoorji Pallonji group, who own about 18% of "Tata Sons"
In summary, Tata Trusts owns a majority stake in the enterprise. And Shapoorji Pallonji (SP) group, a minority stake.
When Ratan Tata turned 75, he handed over the
 reins of his global empire to Cyrus Mistry, son of construction giant 
Pallonji Mistry. He was impressed with Cyrus’s vision for the future and
 was further reassured by the fact that he had had a long association 
with Tata Sons. But this confidence didn’t last long. 
On
 24th October 2016, four years after Mistry’s appointment, Tata Sons 
shocked the business community by announcing that Cyrus Mistry had been 
asked to step down as the Executive Chairman of Tata Sons.
 
The
 board threatened to dismiss him through a no-confidence motion if he 
did not relent. Mistry for his part refused to step down and the board 
members took matters into their own hands. They fired him. Ratan Tata 
was made interim Chairman. And Natarajan Chandrasekaran finally
 took over the reins on 21 February 2017. In the meantime, Cyrus Mistry 
filed a case of oppression and mismanagement against Ratan Tata and 
several others. The matter is yet to be resolved. But it’s safe to say 
that there is some bad blood between the SP Group and Tata Sons and that
 it only grew overtime.
Now, coming on to the current argument for which we will have to move back to March, 2020. 
So
 ever since Coronavirus made landfall, the construction sector has had 
to deal with the huge problem of labour cost. Due to the reverse 
migration, During the 40-day lockdown, over 10 lakh workers were forced 
to ditch construction sites and find shelter elsewhere. As a resut, 
Labour costs skyrocketed in many parts of India and developers were left
 in a lurch.
 
Also,
 considering multiple state governments had imposed heavy restrictions 
on movement and outdoor activities, there wasn’t a lot of construction 
happening in the first place. Meanwhile, companies also had to contend 
with cash flow problems.
 They had idle machinery, unused supplies and vacant facilities just 
lying around. They couldn’t use this stuff. But they had to keep paying 
their dues. This added financial burden meant many entities had to 
reevaluate entire projects even after the lock down restrictions were 
lifted.
 
Including
 the SP Group. The company had to deal with financial problems of its 
own and it was desperately looking to raise some money in a bid to tide 
over the crisis. Thankfully, they managed to elicit some interest and 
rope in a clutch of global investors to raise about ₹11,000 crores in 
total. On September 4th, they finalized the paperwork and were hoping to
 access some of these funds.
But almost immediately Tata Sons intervened.
 
Why? you ask.
 
Well…
 SP Group was raising money by putting up shares of Tata Sons as 
collateral. And the board at Tata Sons wasn’t very comfortable with this
 arrangement. Their contention was simple. Pledging of shares 
technically amounts to a transfer of sorts. After all, if SP Group fails
 to repay in full, the borrowers will own these shares by default. And 
according to the Articles of Association (a document that defines rules 
for running an organization) that's a no-go. Because the document 
clearly prescribes that the board of Tata Sons ought to have the right 
of first refusal.
 
Meaning,
 they get first dibs before anybody else can make an offer. They have a 
right to buy these shares at fair value before somebody else can walk 
in. So just one day later, they went to the Supreme Court to stop the 
company from pledging the shares altogether and the court agreed with 
their assessment. They barred the SP Group from pledging shares. Until 
October 28, when the court promised to deliver a verdict on the matter. 
The SP group, of course, was outraged. They believed Tata was 
deliberately blocking their efforts at fundraising.
  
And for a while, it seemed like things were about to get out of hand. But then, there was a truce. Tata offered to buy the 18% stake SP group held in the company (Tata Sons). And SP Group, for its part, saw it best to accept the offer. 
 
This
 wasn't the end of Tata's problem. In-fact the biggest complication was,
 how is Tata going to raise the massive sum to buyout the 18% stake? 
 
There is also a debate surrounding the actual worth of the stake. According to reports, SP Group claims the value to be at ₹1.8 lac crores whereas Tata seems to think its only worth about ₹1.5 lac crores. It's going to be really challenging for Tata to raise this kind of money as  most
 of Tata’s group companies are bleeding cash. And they can’t borrow 
money either because they only recently promised to reduce debt by the 
boatloads over the next few years. And that leaves us with one final option - TCS.
Tata’s stake in TCS is worth close to ₹6.7 lac crores.
 If they were willing to sell parts of TCS to fund this exercise, maybe 
they could pull it off. But selling TCS also means they’ll have to 
forego part ownership in their crown jewel. And there are definite 
downsides here because Tata has used money from TCS to fund some of 
their other loss-making ventures in the past.
 
What do you think?
 
How will Tata fund this little program and do you believe they’ll be forced to make some tough choices now?
 
KEEP READING
THANK YOU!  
 
 
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