Business Standard

WIPRO Q2 PROFIT UP 5.6%, BEATS ESTIMATES

Wipro beat the Street’s estimates by posting 5.6 per cent growth in its

- AYAN PRAMANIK & RAGHU KRISHNAN

second quarter net profit at ~2,189.5 crore, on the back of an improved efficiency and growing business from customers for its digital offerings.

Wipro, India’s third largest software exporter, said second quarter profits grew 5.6 per cent to ~2,189.5 crore, beating street estimates on the back of improved efficiency and growing business from customers for its digital offerings.

However, it saw revenue dip by 2.5 per cent to ~13,423 crore as income from customers in the US, which contribute­s over half its revenue, saw a marginal increase as it saw weakness in health care and communicat­ion business segments.

The US business grew 0.5 per cent over the previous quarter, while revenue from Europe grew 5.8 per cent and Asia Pacific at 7.4 per cent. India and West Asia, which it saw restructur­ing in the last few quarters, dipped by 3.2 per cent.

Wipro, the Bengalurub­ased IT major, had reported profits of ~2,073.9 crore on revenues of ~13,765.7 crore in the June to September period last year.

The second quarter was also the first time that Wipro had reported quarterly revenue of $2 billion. Operating margins stood at 17.3 per cent on the back of improved employee utilisatio­n of 72.9 per cent, increase in once percentage point, while it saw headcount reduce by 3,031 to 163,759 people. Using its artificial intelligen­ce platform Holmes, it has also been able to see productivi­ty savings of 2,500 people in second-level maintenanc­e.

“Three IT companies Tata Consultanc­y Services (TCS), Persistent, Wipro has shown growth in margin and headcount reduction. Lot of the companies are seeing net headcount reduction,” said Madhu Babu, IT analyst with brokerage Prabhudas Lilladher said.

Last week, Tata Consultanc­y Services, India’s largest IT services exporter, beat street estimates on improved efficiency and increased digital wins. The firm also said clients were increasing spending, indicating a confidence in business revival in the coming quarters.

“For Wipro, 0.3 per cent in constant currency (CC) growth is not great, said Babu. “Organicall­y the company has not grown. Even if you see full year growth, Wipro will do, say, 3.5 per cent growth in dollar terms but there is cross-currency benefits, its acquisitio­ns are helping in growth. The 2.8 per cent YoY growth in Q2 is driven by acquisitio­ns,” he said.

A Bloomberg estimate had projected Wipro to post profits of ~2,061.4 crore on revenues of ~ 13,841.9 crore

“We are making visible progress in each of our strategic themes. Overall, I am confident that we are moving in the right direction and seeing the velocity pick-up,” said Abidali Neemuchwal­a, chief executive officer at Wipro. Wipro says it generates 24.1 per cent of its revenue from digital business that generates higher margins than the traditiona­l services. The cloud business is at a run rate to achieve $1 billion revenue a year.

The firm expects two verticals — health care and communicat­ions that saw business slow in the second quarter — to revive in the coming months.

The firm has projected to grow by 02 per cent its revenue in the range of $2.014 billion to $2.054 billion, which analysts termed it as a disappoint­ment.

“Wipro’s Q3FY18E guidance of 0-2 per cent QoQ revenue growth is a disappoint­ment. The return to growth in BFSI (banking, financial services, and insurance) and ENU, which together account for more than 40 per cent of revenue, is among the positive factors. The buyback price could also protect major stock downside,” said Harit Shah, analyst (IT), Reliance Securities in a note.

The company saw revenue dip by 2.5 % to ~13,423 crore as income from customers in the US rose marginally

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