Tata snapping all business ties won't impact us: Shapoorji Pallonji Group

SP Group is a $5-bn conglomerate with businesses across 40 countries

Abhineet Kumar  |  Mumbai 

The Shapoorji Pallonji (S P) Group on Thursday said the group’s move to snap all business ties with it would not have any impact as its order book from had reached zero value in the financial year ending March 2016. 

The S P Group, led by Cyrus and Shapoor Mistry, holds 18.4 per cent stake in Sons, the primary holding company of the group. was ousted as Sons chairman in October last year following a bitter boardroom battle. He had become a director of Sons in September 2006, a year after his father retired from it. 

The order book for the construction major from the group in that financial year was Rs 659 crore. It rose to Rs 1,124 crore in 2012-13, the year Mistry took over as Sons chairman from Ratan in December. The S P Group was a contractor for key group projects such as the new plant for Steel at Kalinganagar.  

“Orders from the group fell from Rs 1,124 crore in 2012-13 to zero in 2015-16, when Mistry was the chairman of Sons. Any residual orders pending are extremely insignificant in value for the S P Group,” said a statement from the S P Group. 

The orders from the group going to the S P Group was one of the reasons cited for ouster of Mistry by Sons. The Sons board, under the new chairman N Chandrasekaran, has instructed its group to snap all business relations with the S P Group amid a legal tussle at the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT). 

“Mistry had, when he was chairman of Sons, issued a directive in November 2013 to all group to ensure that no new engineering and construction contracts were awarded to the S P group, during his tenure,” the statement said. 

The move from Sons means that the battle between the two groups has seen no signs of abating. After resigning from the boards of listed group companies, Mistry had filed a suit in the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) against Sons for “oppression and mismanagement” in the group holding company. The NCLT found the petition non-maintainable.

Under the new Act, shareholders are required to hold 10 per cent equity to be qualified to file such a petition. The two Mistry firms own a combined 18.4 per cent of ordinary equity shares of the group holding firm, but their holding falls below 10 per cent when preference shares are taken into account. According to the group, Mistry firms hold only about 2.17 per cent.

The two Mistry firms, Cyrus Investments and Sterling Investments, then moved the against the NCLT order that the original petition was non-maintainable. The has heard the arguments of both the sides and is expected to come with its order now.

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