Hindustan Times (Noida)

HCL Tech makes $1.8 billion bet with IBM software deal

- Varun Sood feedback@livemint.com

NEWDELHI: HCL Technologi­es Ltd will spend $1.78 billion to buy eight software products from Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp. (IBM), it announced on Friday, unveiling the single-largest acquisitio­n by an Indian informatio­n technology (IT) services company and a buyout that is unlike any made by risk-averse home-grown IT firms.

Significan­tly, the developmen­t implies that the billionair­e Shiv Nadar-led HCL Tech is making its boldest bet on selling proprietar­y products and services, as the Noida-based company has spent a total of $3.02 billion in building up its software product business since the firm stitched its first intellectu­al property (IP) partnershi­p in August 2016.

According to chief executive officer (CEO) C Vijayakuma­r, HCL has in the last 28 months spent $1.25 billion in licensing IPS from companies such as IBM and DXC Technology Co., and then building products around them.

Under the all-cash deal, HCL will use $1.475 billion of its own cash and borrow $300 million to finance the transactio­n, which the management expects to close by mid-2019.

HCL expects that the eight software products, such as IBM Notes, Domino and Appscan, will help it garner $625 million in incrementa­l revenue in the 12 months after completion of the deal. In a presentati­on made to analysts, HCL said these products have a market size of $110 billion and that five of them are notching up double-digit growth.

HCL’S acquisitio­n strategy contrasts that of its rivals in three important ways.

First, its investment­s are in software products while rivals such as Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd, Infosys Ltd and Wipro Ltd continue to strengthen their presence in digital such as buying design studios. “The $1.8bn deal by HCLT of IBM product is unlike others, given it marks a foray into software with serious capital commitment,” Kunal Tayal of Bank of America Merrill Lynch wrote in a note on Friday.

Second, there’s the size of the deal. Indian IT firms, true to their DNA, have shied away from spending more than $600 million on any one acquisitio­n.

Finally, HCL continues to be reticent about the details of this transactio­n and its entire IP partnershi­p. A case in point: The management declines to comment on how much revenue the company has recorded from having spent $1.25 billion in the past on IP partnershi­ps. This, too, is unlike the acquisitio­ns made by its rivals. The HCL management did not even hold a conference call with the media after it announced the acquisitio­n.

Understand­ably, some analysts were sceptical.

“An aggressive strategy on M&A (mergers and acquisitio­ns) could be construed as a lack of any material accelerati­on in organic business in the near term,” Morgan Stanley analysts Parag Gupta and Gaurav Rateria wrote in a note.

“Revenue sustenance in such deals remains a worry,” Diviya Nagarajan, an analyst at UBS Securities, wrote in a note to investors.

HCL Technologi­es, which reported 12.4% growth to end with $7.84 billion in revenue last year, surpassed Wipro Ltd to become India’s third-biggest software services provider in the three months to June 30, marking the first change in the pecking order of the country’s $167 billion IT outsourcin­g industry in six years. The company expects to grow its dollar revenue by, at best, 10.4% in the current fiscal.

Still, HCL’S management remains confident.

“The software industry is close to $120 billion. We have barely scratched the surface. Just like we found our way to drive growth in the infrastruc­ture maintenanc­e business over the last 10 years, I see growth in IP and product business across very similar lines. There is very little presence of Indian origin players in true software products business,” Vijayakuma­r said on October 23 after the company declared its second quarter earnings.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Shiv Nadar, founder and chairman, HCL Technology
MINT/FILE Shiv Nadar, founder and chairman, HCL Technology

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