Spat with Mistry gets Tata global bad press

New Delhi: As the Tata-Mistry tussle continues, an unintended consequence for the multi-billion dollar image-conscious group has been the bad press it — and its “patriarch” Ratan Tata, 78 — has received globally. From a piece in The Economist headlined “Ratantrum” and a New York Times report that dwelt on some of the Tata Group’s […]

Mistry

New Delhi: As the Tata-Mistry tussle continues, an unintended consequence for the multi-billion dollar image-conscious group has been the bad press it -- and its "patriarch" Ratan Tata, 78 -- has received globally.

From a piece in The Economist headlined "Ratantrum" and a New York Times report that dwelt on some of the Tata Group's alleged murky deals, to a Financial Times columnist who said "much of the fiasco is Mr Tata's fault", a good bit of the reporting and analysis has been critical of the manner in which Tata's handpicked successor Cyrus Mistry was suddenly ousted from the $100 billion "salt to software" conglomerate -- India's first true multinational.