Should Holding Companies Like Tata Sons Be Forced to List? – Resolut Partners

Should Holding Companies Like Tata Sons Be Forced to List?

Author: Sharia Shoaib

What?

RBI’s Scale Based Regulations (SBR) classified Tata Sons, a core investment company (CIC) in the upper layer of Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFC-UL) in September 2022, subjecting it to the mandatory listing requirement by September 2025

SBR for NBFCs is not merely an asset size test but a weighted computation of multiple factors, including size and leverage, financial interconnectedness, complexity, nature and size of liabilities, group structure, and segment penetration

Tata Sons plans to retire all its debt to avoid the listing obligation. A CIC without ‘public funds’ (defined to mean any debt, including shareholder debt) does not require registration with the RBI. (Read our Analysis: Investing into Infrastructure Holding Companies: What if you become a core investment company?)

RBI notes obligation to list serves two purposes – maintaining the highest corporate governance standards and a diffused ownership structure minimizing the possibility of abuse of dominance

Bottom Line

Diktat to list NBFCs driven by IL&FS crisis which was a CIC. However, CICs, unlike other NBFCs, do not engage in financial activities and are merely group-holding companies whose passive income from subsidiaries exceeds their operational income

Holding companies is a common way of structuring businesses globally. However, in India, such structures run the risk of CIC classification, requiring registration with the RBI and enhanced regulatory compliance, including eventual listing obligation. (Refer to our paper on CIC)

While group holding companies can be structured to receive higher operational income (e.g., in the form of service fees) to avoid CIC classification, there is a need to reconsider the regulatory approach towards CICs to ensure that intra-group arrangements remain genuine and straightforward

Recent Research

Part II- DoJ & SEC v Adani: The U.S. Law Perspective
The Adani Indictment: Untangling the Legal Web of Potential Violations in India
FPI To FDI Reclassification: SEBI, RBI Lay Down SOP
Part II: Deal Value Trigger and CCI Approval – How does it affect dealmaking?
Part II- DoJ & SEC v Adani: The U.S. Law Perspective
1 2 3 77

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Register Now