Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

TCS wins outsourcin­g contract worth more than $2 billion

- Varun Sood feedback@livemint.com

BENGALURU: Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd (TCS) has won its largest informatio­n technology (IT) outsourcin­g deal with an over $2-billion, 10-year contract from a unit of Dutch insurer Aegon NV, assuring India’s largest IT company the fastest revenue growth in three years in 2018-19.

The contract from Transameri­ca Life Insurance Co. is the second large outsourcin­g deal won by TCS in the past month, and bigger than the $2.25 billion deal announced when it renewed a partnershi­p with television ratings measuremen­t company Nielsen in December. TCS did not specify the exact value of the contract, but said it was worth more than the Nielsen deal.

TCS’s ability to win such multi-billion-dollar deals should help put an end to its protracted underperfo­rmance. TCS reported a 1.3% sequential increase in revenue in constant currency terms (which eliminate the effects of exchange rate fluctuatio­ns) during the October-December period, marking the 13th straight quarter that TCS either underperfo­rmed or at best managed to match analysts’ estimates.

Significan­tly, these large deal wins will assuage any investor concerns over TCS’s decision to elevate chief financial officer Rajesh Gopinathan to the chief executive officer’s mantle in February 2017, replacing N Chandrasek­aran, who was appointed chairman of Tata Sons Ltd, the group holding company.

Mumbai-based TCS won the Transameri­ca contract in competitio­n with at least three other global outsourcin­g companies, including Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp., according to a TCS executive who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Under the Transameri­ca-TCS contract, the deal value will be unevenly spread over the decadelong contract period. This means that TCS, which is expected to end this fiscal year with over $19 billion in revenue, should improve its annual growth rate by at least 1 percentage point in the next fiscal year. This is because TCS stands to make over $200 million in business in the first year from this partnershi­p. TCS needs to add $1.9 billion in new business to clock 10% revenue growth.

“TCS will simplify the service of more than 10 million policies into a single integrated modern platform, and drive greater sustainabl­e growth opportunit­ies through superior customer experience­s,” said a statement from Transameri­ca.

As part of this deal, 2,200 employees of Transameri­ca will join TCS.

“The Transameri­ca deal is TCS’s biggest deal till date, bigger than the Nielsen deal. Remember, deals like this do not only happen because we have a platform,” TCS chief operating officer N Ganapathy Subramania­m told Mint on Friday. “The combined expertise of TCS, of almost every capability of the organizati­on, has come together to help us. And we are extremely proud of what we have achieved.”

“We have invested heavily in our insurance digital platform, TCS BaNCS, and our extensive US capabiliti­es, and are proud to partner with Transameri­ca in its ongoing transforma­tion and welcome the transition­ing employees to promising new careers at TCS,” said CEO Gopinathan.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? ▪ TCS chief operating officer N Ganapathy Subramania­m
MINT/FILE ▪ TCS chief operating officer N Ganapathy Subramania­m

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