कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त

The Tata Group squabble suggests a leadership vacuum

Mint Kolkata

|

October 20, 2025

The Tata Group is no stranger to trouble.

- RAJRISHI SINGHAL

The 157-year-old industrial group has weathered multiple storms—both external and internal—in the past. A new in-house leadership crisis and shareholding dilemma is now rocking its boardrooms and will severely test its resilience. On trial is also the group’s famed governance model, which has acquired some dents over the past two decades or so. One thing is inescapable: this is a full-blown leadership crisis and resolving it will be key to assuring the group a durable and stable future.

Internal dissension and public sparring among trustees of Tata Trusts, which collectively hold over 65% in the group's holding company, Tata Sons, has exposed the edifice’s structural faults. These trustees are responsible for, among other things, nominating directors to the holding company and providing broad corporate direction. These trusts, in turn, depend on dividend payouts from Tata Sons to finance their charitable activities. Tata Sons, for example, paid over ₹1,712 crore to the seven trusts for 2024-25. Trustees on the board of Tata Sons are expected to keep other trustees updated about key governance decisions; this is where, ironically, trust has broken down.

Mint Kolkata से और कहानियाँ

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

America’s new approach to the Indo-Pacific is disappointing

Washington does not seem to view China as an ideological threat

time to read

3 mins

December 16, 2025

Mint Kolkata

Rural jobs law 2.0: More days, states must chip in

VB-G RAM G Bill to replace MGNREGA will overhaul funding, implementation

time to read

2 mins

December 16, 2025

Mint Kolkata

Roll out a carpet

India's central bank recently released the 10th edition of its Handbook of Statistics on Indian States.

time to read

1 min

December 16, 2025

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

PSU bonds issues hit pause as yields rise despite rate cut

tenor government borrowing kept pressure firmly on the yield curve,” said Venkatakrishnan Srinivasan, founder and managing partner at Rockfort Fincap LLP.

time to read

1 mins

December 16, 2025

Mint Kolkata

SC mulls pan-India guidelines to curb mishaps on highways

Apex court bench also flags illegal construction along highways causing accidents

time to read

1 mins

December 16, 2025

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

Passive governance is a legacy that’s proving difficult to shed

The IndiGo crisis spotlights our failure to replace reactive regulation with a pre-emptive model enabled by real-time data

time to read

4 mins

December 16, 2025

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

Fintech lending 2.0 shifts focus to depth, discipline

Focus shifts from blitz-scale expansion to unit economics, deeper monetization of customers

time to read

2 mins

December 16, 2025

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

China no longer needs Germany— and Germany wants a divorce.

Some German manufacturers think once-symbiotic partnership has turned into abusive relationship and they want out

time to read

6 mins

December 16, 2025

Mint Kolkata

Mint Kolkata

Flipkart gets nod for India residency, one hurdle left

Walmart-controlled Flipkart received a key approval to shift its domicile back to India, a prerequisite for a local listing, in a move that also reflects a shift in India-US economic ties amid prolonged bilateral trade negotiations.

time to read

1 mins

December 16, 2025

Mint Kolkata

Chile gets its most right-wing president in decades

Chile’s ultraconservative former lawmaker José Antonio Kast secured a stunning victory in the presidential election Sunday, defeating the candidate of the center-left governing coalition and setting the stage for the country’s most right-wing government in 35 years of democracy.

time to read

1 min

December 16, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size