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Tata Sons convened its board on May 26, 2026, for a closely watched meeting dominated by concerns over loss-making new businesses and an intensifying governance debate.
Reports from May 25–26 say individual group companies — notably Tata Digital, Air India and the group's electronics ventures — were to make presentations on performance and turnaround plans after unlisted units reported combined losses of ₹10,905 crore in FY25, a figure media estimates may widen to about ₹29,000 crore for the following year.
The meeting sits against a backdrop of visible friction between Tata Trusts’ leadership and chairman N. Chandrasekaran: Noel Tata has expressed worries about mounting losses and is said to be reluctant to take Tata Sons public, while other trustees reportedly favour a listing.
Regulatory pressure stems from the RBI’s classification of Tata Sons as an upper-layer NBFC and a subsequent “look-through” approach that strengthens the case for mandatory listing.
Corporate governance advisory InGovern has urged a market listing to improve transparency.
Reports differ on whether Chandrasekaran’s reappointment would be formally addressed, but the session is widely seen as a test of the group’s power balance and strategy.




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