Business Standard

Infosys net profit rises 17.5% in Q4

Announces ~9,200-crore buyback; FY22 revenue growth forecast at 12-14%

- SHIVANI SHINDE

Informatio­n technology (IT) services major Infosys on Wednesday posted a 17.5 per cent jump in net profit for the March quarter on a year-on-year (YOY) basis, even though it was down 2.3 per cent sequential­ly.

Infosys’s board also approved a share buyback of up to ~9,200 crore. The buyback will be done from the open market and the price per share will not exceed ~1,750. This is part of the firm's capital return plan of ~15,600 crore, which also includes a final dividend of ~6,400 crore. The country’s second-largest IT services firm forecast annual revenue growth of 12 to 14 per cent in constant currency terms and operating margins in the range of 2224 per cent for 2021-22, as demand for its digital services grows amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

Salil Parekh, chief executive officer and managing director of Infosys, described FY21 as an exceptiona­l year. “Our digital business is now 51.5 per cent of the total revenue for Q4, growth of 34 per cent YOY in constant currency terms. Our large deals of $14.1 billion for the year are the strongest ever. We are exiting FY21 on a strong momentum, alongside a focused strategy to accelerate client digital journeys. This gives us confidence about a stronger FY22,” he said.

The company’s revenue of ~26,311 crore in Q4FY21 was up 2 per cent quarteron-quarter, and rose 9.6 per cent YOY. Operating margins, at 24.5 per cent, for the quarter expanded by 320 basis points for the full year; margins were down sequential­ly. The management said that though they were confident about the demand environmen­t going ahead, with customers looking robust on tech spends, especially cloud and digital, margins would get impacted by wage hikes, which would be staggered.

The company expects travel to pick up in the second half of the current fiscal year.

Infosys’ capital return policy came into being a couple of years back. As part of it, 85 per cent of cash is returned to shareholde­rs -- either through dividends or buyback. “If you look at the payout we have done in the last two years (FY 20 and FY21), we would have returned about 83 per cent of the 85 per cent to shareholde­rs,” explained Nilanjan Roy, chief financial officer.

When compared to industry peer Tata Consultanc­y Services (TCS), Infosys performed better on a year-onyear basis, but lagged in sequential growth. For instance, the total contract value that TCS registered for Q4 was $9.2 billion; Infosys, on the other hand, has large deal signing of $2.1 billion, lower than the $7.1 billion it signed in Q3.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India