Business Standard

IT firms stare at tepid Q4 numbers

- AYAN PRAMANIK More on business-standard.com

Indian informatio­n technology (IT) services companies are yet to see growth revival and might report lower numbers for the quarter ending March (fourth or Q4 in 2016-17), as uncertaint­ies continue over a new tax regime in the US and the slowing of traditiona­l business.

The results season will begin with the country's second largest IT services entity, Infosys, announcing its numbers this Thursday.

Sector analysts say some top and mid-level companies saw growth in some business accounts. And, tierI companies worked on models to offset a rise in cost due to more local hiring and potential tax changes by Donald Trump in the US.

These performanc­e improvemen­ts of IT companies might, however, get impacted by a rupee which rises against the dollar; it had closed March at 65 to a dollar. Profit is likely to be impacted across companies with these currency headwinds.

Large and mid-size companies are expected to post nil to two per cent revenue growth in constant currency terms on a sequential basis, says brokerage Motilal Oswal. HCL Technologi­es should, however, see up to 3.4 per cent, with contributi­on from acquisitio­ns, notes a preview report by the firm.

“IT vendors to show moderate growth of 0.8 to 3.9 per cent in constant currency terms on a sequential basis, with HCL or TCS (Tata Consultanc­y Services) leading the pack,” said Madhu Babu, IT analyst at brokerage Prabhudas Lilladher.

The sector will keenly watch the growth forecasts by Infosys, which is expected to announce a conservati­ve number of between seven and nine per cent. Nasscom, the apex software industry body, has said it expects between eight and 10 per cent for the sector.

A change in the on-shore business model, with more local hiring, will mean additional cost for Indian IT. “Revenue growth for the industry still remains a challenge, with little, if any, clear signs of accelerati­on after a tepid 2016...The business model changes at on-site have been underway for a while, and the higher costs have more-or-less been absorbed so far. But, the recent direction of the rupee against the dollar might just end up being an additional headwind to thwart any assumption­s of sanguine performanc­e,” said Gautam Duggad, research head at Motilal Oswal.

Indian IT is seeing a transition in the business model as more customers seek service delivery through digital technology such as cloud. This has also resulted in significan­t reduction in long-term and high-volume contracts.

Many clients now prefer to spend their IT budgets through a pay-as-you-use model. At the same time, Indian IT companies are seeing a decline in on-premise technology services business, still their core.

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