City
Epaper

Tata Sons emerge as the highest bidder for Air India

By IANS | Updated: October 8, 2021 17:18 IST

New Delhi, Oct 8 The Centre on Friday declared Tata Sons' subsidiary Talace as the highest bidder for national ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 8 The Centre on Friday declared Tata Sons' subsidiary Talace as the highest bidder for national carrier Air India under the divestment process.

The Tatas' subsidiary quoted Rs 18,000 crore of enterprise value for Air India, Divestment Secretary Tuhin Kanta Pandey announced.

There were only two bidders in the final stage of divestment.

Besides, the Tatas' subsidiary, the second bidding entity was a consortium led by industrialist Ajay Singh.

Notably, conglomerate Tata Sons was touted to be the front-runner to get hold of the carrier.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Tuhin kanta pandeyTata SonsAjay SinghAir IndiaFirst air indiaAir india airbusNational carrier air indiaHouse of tataGoogle india codeTata sons private limitedTata sons private ltd
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalAir India Cancels All Flights Amid Ongoing 'Operation Sindoor' Until 12 Noon on May 7

National‘Please Reclaim Your Wheelchair’: Vir Das Criticizes Air India for Flight Mismanagement

NationalDrunk Man Urinates On Co-Passenger On Delhi-Bangkok Flight

MumbaiAir India Flight to New York Returns to Mumbai After Mid-Air Threat

InternationalAir India Flight to Delhi Makes Emergency U-Turn to Chicago Due to Clogged Toilets

Business Realted Stories

BusinessIndian carriers cancel flights to 24 airports till May 15 as tensions flare up

BusinessManappuram Finance clocks Rs 191 crore net loss in Q4, NII declines 6.7 pc

BusinessFM Sitharaman takes stock of steps for cybersecurity at banks amid rising border tensions

BusinessNirmala Sitharaman reviews banking sector preparedness amidst tension at borders

BusinessIndia will put forward its perspective before IMF as it reviews Pakistan bailout package