For the 157-year-old multi-billion dollar Shapoorji Pallonji Group, the death of its youngest scion Cyrus Mistry in a tragic road accident, is a double-loss as his untimely passing away comes on the heels of the group patriarch's demise late June.

The nearly $30-billion diversified group, which owns 18.6 per cent in the $130-billion Tata Group, was founded by the late senior Pallonji Mistry (great grandfather of Cyrus) in 1865 as Littlewood Pallonji & Co.

Cyrus' father Pallonji Mistry, who died on June 28, 2022, at the age of 93, is dubbed as 'the Phantom of Bombay House'. According to the Bloomberg billionaires index, the SP Group has a networth of about $30 billion in 2022.

Also read: SP Group’s Pallonji Mistry dies at 93

The Mistry's epic showdown after Cyrus Mistry was thrown out of the group as the chairman in a board coup in October 2016, with the Tata Group sparked the biggest corporate feud in the history of India Inc.

Under Cyrus' watch, the Tata Group (top-20 listed group companies) grew by CAGR of 12.5 per cent, while their debt has increased at a slower pace of 9.98 per cent from Rs 1.89 lakh crore to Rs 2.29 lakh crore.

But during this period, the net profit zoomed at a CAGR of 42.3 per cent, indicating much more efficient operations under his tenure and he left the group with an overall turnover of over $100 billion which also nearly doubled under his watch.

The SP Group's interest spans from engineering & construction under its flagship Afcons, real estate, consumer goods and solar power, from the last two it had exited recently as part of deleveraging. The group employs more than 50,000 people in more than 50 countries today.

Cyrus, 54, who died on the spot earlier in the day when his car lost control on the Mumbai-Ahmedabad highway, was the youngest son of Pallonji Mistry and left behind his wife Rohiqua and two sons, Firoz and Zahan.

Cyrus, since his appointment as the chairman of the Tata Group in December 2012, had not been involved in operations of the family business, having entrusted it to his elder brother Shapoor Mistry.

Since late 2019, the group underwent more management changes with Shapoor's son Pallon, 26, being inducted on the board of the group holding company, while daughter Tanya was handling the group's corporate social responsibility activities.

The new-gen has been mandated to help the group companies with digitalisation and better communication with its shareholders. Pallon is now part of the apex panel that takes long-term, strategic and impactful decisions.

Shapoorji Pallonji & Co has been known for its engineering prowess and is the oldest domestic construction engineering and construction company in the country, under its flagship Afcons.

The company's first project was the construction of pavement in Girgaum Chowpatty in south Mumbai, followed by the construction of a reservoir on Malabar Hill, which has been supplying water to the megapolis since then.

The SP group's engineering empire has constructed opulent hotels, stadia, palaces, and factories across Asia.

Some of the iconic buildings that the group built over the decades include the Reserve Bank of India headquarters, the BSE Towers, the Oberoi hotel in Mumbai, and the blue-and-gold Al Alam palace for the Sultan of Oman, apart from the Statue of Belief -- of Lord Shiva in Nathdwara in Rajasthan, amongst the largest statuea of Shiva in the world and the fourth-largest statue in the world), the Jumeirah Lake Towers in Dubai and Ebene Cyber City in Mauritius.

Some of its latest engineering landmarks are the Chenab Railway Bridge, Atal Tunnel, Dhaka-Chittagong railway corridor and the first Kolkata metro.

The company also built the Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai, the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in New Delhi and the Mumbai Central Railway station in just 21 months for Rs 1.6 crore. In 2010, it built the country's tallest building of the time, The Imperial, a residential tower in Mumbai.

The SP group exited from the consumer durables business Eureka Forbes, known for its vacuum cleaners and water purifiers, after selling its remaining 8.7 per cent stake to Lunolux, a firm backed by private equity firm Advent International in September 2021 for Rs 4,400 crore. Similarly, it also sold its majority stake in Sterling & Wilson Solar Power to a Reliance Industries entity in October 2021.

Since 2012, when the late Pallonji Mistry announced his retirement, the group has been under the control of his eldest son and Cyrus's elder brother Shapoor Pallonji Mistry.

The reorganisation was also due to the fact that in December 2012, Cyrus was appointed chairman of Tata Sons, following which he withdrew completely from the family business “to ensure that there is no conflict of interest with the Tata group, including banning his family companies from entering into any business with any Tata entities unless through open competitive budding”.

From early 2003, the Mistry family gave up their Indian citizenship and became Irish nationals. This was also because Cyrus' mother Patsy Perin Dubash is from Dublin and the change of their citizenship was on “the basis of his marriage to an Irish national.' The family's interest in Ireland is compounded by their love of horses and they also own a 200-acre stud farm in Pune.

comment COMMENT NOW