Tata Sons remains the only Core Investment Company (CIC) that is non-compliant with the Reserve Bank of India regulations, InGovern said.
“This is not merely a matter of choice or investor preference; it is the logical consequence of the company’s scale, systemic significance, and continuing influence over a large public shareholder universe,” the firm said.
The earlier question of deregistration and the current question of listing are part of the same continuum: in both cases, the real issue is whether an entity of this magnitude can be permitted to remain outside a more rigorous transparency regime, InGovern said.
“The case for continued private status has weakened materially. Arguments based on holding company discounts, historical stewardship, or philanthropic ownership may explain why the structure has endured, but they do not provide a sufficient basis to exempt a systemically relevant entity from stronger disclosure and governance norms,” it said.
Low valuation cannot be used as a shield against market accountability, and regulatory standards cannot be diluted simply because compliance may alter long-standing control preferences, InGovern said.
The appropriate policy direction is not deferment, ambiguity, or open-ended observation. It is clear and enforceable movement toward greater disclosure, stronger oversight, and eventual listing, so that governance keeps pace with the size, complexity, and public-market relevance of the Tata ecosystem, it noted.
Any further delay would only prolong opacity in a structure that already has a substantial bearing on public capital and against minority shareholder interests, InGovern warned.
The latest public debate has also revealed differing views within Tata Trusts on the listing question, which reinforces the need for a transparent, market-facing structure. Where control is exercised through a complex trust-based holding arrangement, the case for listing becomes stronger, not weaker, because governance should not depend on private consensus alone, it said.
Listing does not inherently prevent long-term stewardship or the ability to support group entities during stress. The concern that listing will “break” the Tata model is not supported by Indian market experience, the proxy firm said.
RBI has neither accepted nor rejected Tata Sons’ deregistration application, but has indicated in many ways that large CICs should be listed. If Tata Sons remains systemically relevant for regulatory purposes, there is a strong argument that it should also be systemically transparent in governance terms, it said.
The proxy firm noted that Tata Sons holds controlling stakes in listed firms like Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Titan, Indian Hotels Company among others. Collectively, the listed Tata group entities account for over ~₹25 lakh crore in market capitalisation, representing a significant weight within key Indian benchmark indices such as the Nifty 50 and the Sensex. The Tata group’s listed market footprint represents a meaningful share of the overall market capitalisation of Indian stock exchanges, including the BSE and the National Stock Exchange of India.
A holding company exercising influence over businesses of such scale — affecting over 1.20 crore of retail shareholders, pension funds, insurance companies, and mutual funds — cannot reasonably remain outside the governance and transparency expectations increasingly associated with systemically important financial and industrial conglomerates, it added.
