Business Standard

VISA CURBS, WFH DOMINATE INFOSYS’ FIRST VIRTUAL AGM

- DEBASIS MOHAPATRA

Questions related to work from home (WFH), temporary suspension of H1B visa, and impact of the India-china border dispute dominated the proceeding­s at Infosys’ annual general meeting (AGM) on Saturday. The 39th AGM, which was held virtually for the first time, was attended by 1,771 shareholde­rs through videoconfe­rencing. However, it lacked the usual hustle and bustle of past years. Poor audio and video connection­s also interrupte­d the proceeding­s.

Questions related to work from home (WFH), temporary suspension of H1B visa and impact of the India-china border dispute dominated the proceeding­s at Infosys’ annual general meeting (AGM) on Saturday.

The 39th AGM, which was held virtually for the first time, was attended by 1,771 shareholde­rs through video conferenci­ng. However, it lacked the usual hustleand-bustle of past years.

Poor audio and video connection­s, many a times from the shareholde­rs’ side, also interrupte­d the proceeding­s with ‘can you hear me’ and ‘please go ahead’ emerging as the frequent phrases used throughout the AGM.

The annual meet also saw some shareholde­rs of the country’s second largest IT services company raising concerns over falling operating margins. But many congratula­ted the management for delivering good FY20 performanc­e despite the tough economic conditions.

Most investors were curious to know whether WFH would be a permanent operating model in the post Covid-19 world. Many shareholde­rs even wanted to know what was the expense ratio of Infosys on lease rentals with respect to net profit. Also, how it would change in terms of savings in case WFH is adopted in a big way. “What is the impact of productivi­ty (of employees) due to WFH and what has the company done to secure data in this period as we have seen more cyberattac­ks,” asked Anish Hegde, a shareholde­r.

To this, Infosys’ chief operating officer (COO) UB Pravin Rao said that the future of work would be a hybrid model comprising both working from office and home.

The anxiety related to the border skirmishes with China also reflected in the AGM as many shareholde­rs had queries on how was it going to affect Infosys’ operations in the neighbouri­ng country.

Infosys’ CEO and MD Salil Parekh said clients in China are being served mostly by local hires and it has not seen any business disruption so far.

On Trump administra­tion’s decision to suspend non-immigrant visas till December, the management of Infosys said the impact would be minimal as the IT firm’s dependence on H1B visa has come down drasticall­y over the years. “We have more than 60 per cent of workers who are not dependent on visas in the US. Infosys is well prepared due to the strong localisati­on strategy as we have significan­tly reduced our dependence on visa,” Pravin Rao said.

In the close to two and half hour proceeding­s, the management sent the message to shareholde­rs that the IT firm is well placed to weather the storm despite near-term challenges like dip in operating margin.

“In the near term, some slowing in closure of deals is seen due to the pandemic. But, we have not seen any largescale cancellati­ons. In the nearterm, our operating margin may see some headwinds due to falling utilisatio­n. However, we will try to offset it with less travel cost and other optimisati­on moves,” said Parekh.

Terming a second wave of Covid19 as key risk factor, Parekh added that sectors like retail, manufactur­ing and travel & hospitalit­y have been mostly affected due to Covid. “For Infosys, travel and hospitalit­y is a small segment. So, we don’t expect any material impact due to this,” Parekh said. He, however, said verticals like communicat­ions and hitech are witnessing a positive push due to the pandemic with companies accelerati­ng digital adoption.

Infosys’ chairman and cofounder Nandan Nilekani said the robust balance sheet, steady growth momentum and strong executive team put the company in good stead to overcome the crisis.

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