Tata Sons board approves FY26 accounts; no discussion on Chandra extension, IPO plans

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The meeting, held at Bombay House in Mumbai, was attended by Tata Group chairman N Chandrasekaran, Tata Trusts chairman Noel Tata and Tata Trusts vice chairman Venu Srinivasan, among other directors.

Anirban Ghosh
Credits: Anirban Ghosh

The board of Tata Sons on Friday approved the holding company's annual accounts and dividend for FY26, but did not take up two closely watched issues that have been at the centre of speculation in recent months — the extension of chairman N Chandrasekaran's tenure and the potential listing of the holding company, news agency PTI reported, quoting people familiar with the matter.

The meeting, held at Bombay House in Mumbai, was attended by Tata Group chairman N Chandrasekaran, Tata Trusts chairman Noel Tata and Tata Trusts vice chairman Venu Srinivasan, among other directors. The board meeting began at around 11 am and lasted for nearly four hours.

According to the report, the board approved the annual accounts for FY26 and discussed routine business matters, but neither Chandrasekaran's reappointment nor Tata Sons' listing status figured on the agenda.

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The absence of any discussion on the two issues is important, given the heightened attention around both matters following reports of differing views within the Tata ecosystem.

Chandrasekaran, who took over as chairman of Tata Sons in 2017, is widely expected to be considered for another term when his current tenure ends in February 2027. However, the issue has attracted scrutiny after reports suggested that Tata Trusts had sought greater clarity on the performance of some of the group's capital-intensive and loss-making businesses, including Air India, Tata Digital and Tata Electronics. Recent board reviews have focused on the financial trajectory, capital allocation plans and future growth strategies of these businesses.

According to an ANI report that came post the meeting, Chandrasekaran "offered a distinct, reassuring smile to the media before his vehicle pulled away".

The other closely watched issue is the future ownership structure of Tata Sons. The holding company was classified by the Reserve Bank of India as an upper-layer non-banking financial company (NBFC) in 2022, a category that would ordinarily require a public listing. Tata Sons subsequently repaid debt and applied for deregistration as a core investment company, seeking exemption from the listing requirement. The RBI is yet to take a final decision on the matter.

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Reports in recent months have indicated that Noel Tata favours retaining Tata Sons as a privately held company, arguing that the current structure supports the long-term philanthropic objectives of Tata Trusts, which collectively own about 66% of Tata Sons. The issue has gained further prominence after RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra said earlier this month that the central bank would soon update the list of upper-layer NBFCs.

For now, Friday's board meeting offered no fresh clues on either front, leaving investors and market observers awaiting future deliberations on the leadership succession and listing questions that could shape the next phase of India's largest business conglomerate. 

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