Business Standard

IT SECTOR GETS US PREZ DEBATE RELIEF

- SHIVANI SHINDE NADHE & PUNEET WADHWA

The $146-billion Indian informatio­n technology (IT) services industry could well heave a sigh of relief in the first presidenti­al debate between Republican Party candidate Donald Trump and his Democratic Party rival Hillary Clinton did not have any mention of job losses because of the industry or the H1-B visa issue.

However, China and Mexico figured in the debate, in keeping with Trump’s campaign and his plan to get jobs back to America. During the campaign, Trump had been vocal on H1-B visas and had proposed to raise the minimum wage for this most-popular visa for Indian IT profession­als.

The 90-minute debate saw Trump stressing on companies moving out of the US to China and Mexico for setting up manufactur­ing hubs.

When asked how Trump was a better candidate to put money back into US citizen’s pocket, he said: “Our jobs are fleeing the country. They're going to Mexico. They're going to many other countries. You look at what China is doing to our country in terms of making our products. They're devaluing their currency, and there's nobody in our government to fight them.”

“No leader will want jobs to go out of their country and that is what was reiterated by both the candidates. It is very generic,” said R Chandrashe­kar, president, Nasscom. However, he said American corporates attempts to stay competitiv­e, and this is in part aided by the Indian IT sector.

Chandrashe­khar said the preoccupat­ion with immigratio­n in the election is focused on those who move illegally and unskilled labour, which impact the average salary. “In the larger debate, skilled worker and H1-B visa is relatively a smaller issue. Rather, all respective authoritie­s have acknowledg­ed that there is a shortage of educated people in the US,” he added.

“I think the US also realises that what Indian IT industry contribute­s just adds to the competitiv­e edge of the US corporates. Look at the industry and you see the change. These day’s conversati­on is no more about headcount or how many people being added but on platforms, technology, etc.,” said Ganesh Natarajan, former chief executive officer Zensar Technologi­es and chairman of Nasscom Foundation.

Trump further added: “We have to stop our companies from leaving the US and, with it, firing all of their people. All you have to do is take a look at Carrier air conditioni­ng in Indianapol­is. They left, fired 1,400 people. They're going to Mexico. So many hundreds and hundreds of companies are doing this.”

As for Clinton, her focus was on small and medium industries and jobs in infrastruc­ture, advanced manufactur­ing, innovation and technology, clean, renewable energy, and small business, because most new jobs will come from small businesses.

India and tech job losses have been a part of the US presidenti­al elections for several years. Impact of Trump victory However, analysts at Nomura had earlier predicted that Trump victory could cast a shadow on the fortunes of IT companies, which may be negatively affected by immigratio­n and outsourcin­g policies.

“An H-1B crackdown under Trump would lower the profitabil­ity of Indian IT companies (due to higher wage costs) while potential restrictio­ns on business process outsourcin­g (BPO) could also hurt revenues,” the report suggested.

Expecting an initial negative market reaction in case of Trump victory that could see the S&P500 drop over three per cent, analysts at Nomura preferred exposure to military equipment makers, defensive stocks and yield plays as a global investing strategy; and recommend an ‘avoid’ on companies that have US exposure in China industrial­s, Indian IT and Korean auto stocks.

As regards the debt market, Nomura said it expects India rates markets to remain supported despite a Trump victory with local idiosyncra­tic factors remaining more important. A Donald Trump victory, Nomura said, would make central banks shift their bias further towards easier-for-longer policies.

Rates markets in Korea, India, Malaysia and Australia would benefit in such an environmen­t, Nomura said, while Hong Kong and Singapore are likely to underperfo­rm US rates. An expectatio­n of a more dovish US Federal Reserve (US Fed), combined with poor risk sentiment, would likely lead to a flattening bias in regional rates curves.

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US PRESIDENTI­AL ELECTIONS

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