Tata Motors Shares Slide 7% Ahead of Demerger Record Date: What Investors Should Know
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- Last Updated: 18 Dec 2025 at 10:26 PM IST

The shares of Tata Motors have dropped by approximately 6.8% in the last four trading days as it dropped to below the ₹700 level to close at an area of 689.3 on the BSE as investors position before the demerger record date of the company.
The scheme took effect on 1 October 2025, and the record date is fixed at 14 October 2025, when the company will ascertain the people who are entitled to the new commercial-vehicle shares. (The Economic Times)
The question that traders and shareholders are posing is: Should you keep holding up to the record date, or should you sell and re-enter, or should you use this dip as a buying opportunity?
What’s driving the four-day slump?
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Event uncertainty and profit-booking. As the ex/record date approaches, short-term traders often trim positions to avoid allocation risk; that behaviour has amplified selling pressure this week. (The Economic Times)
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Technical pressure. The stock has been testing important technical levels (the 200-day moving average), and some algos and technical traders reacted to recent weakness. (Business Standard)
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Complexity of the demerger. The corporate action splits Tata Motors into two listed entities, a newly formed Commercial Vehicles company (TMLCV) and the continuing Passenger Vehicles company (PV, including EVs and JLR), at a 1:1 entitlement.
That reorganisation changes the effective exposure of existing shareholders, prompting some to reduce positions rather than manage two separate holdings. (mint)
These forces combine to create short-term volatility, but they don’t always reflect the long-term fundamentals of either business.
How will the record date and entitlement work?
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Record date: 14 October 2025. Shareholders on the company’s register on that date will receive one share of Tata Motors Commercial Vehicles Ltd (TMLCV) for every one Tata Motors share held (1:1). The demerger scheme is effective from 1 October 2025. (mint)
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What traders must do: If you hold positions in margin or intraday, check with your broker; some platforms will auto-square off derivative or leveraged positions a day before the ex/record date (for example, many brokers have flagged squaring off on 13 October). Convert to delivery (CNC) if you want entitlement. (Times of India)
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Listing and timelines: Separate listings for the two entities are expected later in the quarter, subject to regulatory clearances; exact listing dates will be announced post-approval. (Kotak Neo)
So ensure your holdings are in delivery if you intend to receive the new CV stock; otherwise, you may miss the entitlement.
What should investors consider now?
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Your investment horizon. Long-term investors who believe in the distinct growth stories of PV (EVs, JLR) and CV businesses may prefer to stay invested to gain exposure to both listed entities. Short-term traders should weigh transaction costs and the risk of being allocated one stock but needing the other. (mint)
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Tax and corporate-action mechanics. Demergers can have tax and cost implications (brokerage, STT, capital-gains treatment). Consult your tax advisor for precise treatment based on whether you hold on the record date and how you transact afterwards. (Money Control)
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Arbitrage opportunities vs execution risk. Some arbitrage strategies exist around demergers, but they require timely execution, adequate margin, and an understanding of how exchanges and brokers adjust positions. (Samco)
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Keep an eye on fundamentals. The demerged businesses will have different balance-sheet mixes, margins, and growth drivers; monitor upcoming quarterly results and management commentary once the scheme is operative. (mint)
If you are unsure whether to hold through the record date, ask yourself: “Do I want exposure to both stand-alone businesses, or a single segment?” Your answer should guide whether to stay invested or reallocate.
Final Takeaway
The near-term 7% fall is a mechanical and behavioural movement in advance of the 14 October 2025 record date and not an abrupt alteration in the underlying businesses of Tata Motors. To long-term investors, the demerger will open up value through the formation of focused companies; to short-term traders, it will present operational and settlement complexity that justifies careful and planned action. Will investors consider this dip as a short-term response or the beginning of a re-rating of the separate entities? (The Economic Times)
References
Business Standard
Kotak Neo
Money Control
Samco
mint
The Economic Times
Times of India



