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Syed Amjad Ali moves on from Mullen Lintas

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New Delhi: Syed Amjad Ali has moved on Mullen Lintas. He was serving as the president of the agency’s Delhi office since 2017. Ali was one of the founding members of the Mullen Lintas in 2015. During this time he worked on several brands such as Vistara, Honda Cars, Gionee Mobiles, Llyod, Zee TV, Modern Foods, Honor Mobiles, Havells and Dabur.

Prior to joining Mullen Lintas, Ali served for over two decades at Lowe Lintas. He joined the agency in 1995 as an executive and grew to become an executive director where he led several big accounts such as LG Electronics, Maruti Suzuki, Havells, Olx, Micromax, Greenply, and others.

He was one of the key pillars at both the agencies.
 

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Tata Sons defers decision on chairman N Chandrasekaran’s third term 

Term runs till 2027, but board differences are stalling extension talks

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MUMBAI: Tata Sons has deferred a decision on whether to extend the tenure of its chairman, N Chandrasekaran, injecting fresh uncertainty into the leadership timeline of India’s largest conglomerate.
The board had last year cleared a third executive term for Chandrasekaran running until February 2027, when he turned 65. However, deliberations on any further extension were put on hold this week after differences emerged during a board meeting, CNBC-TV18 reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

The pause underscores internal strains as the group pushes through an aggressive investment cycle while grappling with uneven financial returns. The Economic Times reported that Chandrasekaran himself asked for discussions on his reappointment to be deferred after some directors raised concerns about mounting losses at several newer businesses.

Those concerns were led by Tata Trusts chairman Noel Tata, the principal shareholder of Tata Sons. Other board members countered that losses were expected in early-stage, capital-intensive ventures designed to secure the group’s long-term position.

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Since taking charge in 2017, following the ouster of Cyrus Mistry, Chandrasekaran has driven a phase of expansion and consolidation. Over the past five years, the tata group has nearly doubled revenue and more than tripled net profit and market capitalisation, while committing about Rs 5.5 lakh crore to investments aimed at making the conglomerate “future fit”, according to its latest annual report.

Recent numbers, however, present a more mixed picture. Tata Sons reported a 24 per cent rise in revenue to Rs 5.92 lakh crore in fiscal 2025, while net profit fell 17 per cent to Rs 28,898 crore.

In its annual report, the company said the year opened with expectations of macroeconomic stability and easing inflation. That optimism faded as uncertainty over global trade policy intensified, complicating the operating environment.

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For now, the question of leadership continuity at the apex of the Tata Group remains unresolved and closely watched by investors assessing the cost and conviction behind the conglomerate’s long-term bets.

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