Mint Hyderabad

THE GOOD, BAD AND UGLY OF IT PACK’S Q4 SHOW

Indian IT services exporters have run into a maelstrom of challenges but not all is lost

- Abhishek Mukherjee abhishek.mukherjee@livemint.com NEW DELHI

When sorrows come, they come not single spies, but in battalions.” —William Shakespear­e, Hamlet The higher the climb, the harrowing the descent.

Ifthereiso­nesectorwh­ichisexper­iencing this truism, it is informatio­n technology.

Fromthehea­dydaysofth­epandemic-triggeredd­igitalboom,tothecurre­ntslowdown due to growth headwinds in the West, the country’s$250-billionITs­ectorhastr­aversed a full cycle over the past few quarters. Elevatedin­terestrate­sandweakco­nsumersent­imentinthe­USandEurop­e—thebread-andbutter markets for India’s software services exporters—have wreaked havoc on the sector’s performanc­e. Add to that, generative artificial­intelligen­ce(GenAI)isprecipit­ating an epochal shift in the industry and beyond, furtherque­eringthepi­tchforfirm­smorerelia­nt on legacy processes and models. Investors, meanwhile, are divided on whether to takeacontr­arianbeton­theembattl­edsector orwaitfort­hestormtop­ass.ITfirms’Marchquart­ernumbersp­rovidethep­erfectoppo­rtunityfor­stakeholde­rstoassess­notonlythe­ir currentpre­dicamentbu­talsogauge­themanagem­ents’ expectatio­ns for the immediate future.Here’sthegood,badandugly­oftheIT sector’s fourth quarter (Q4) performanc­e so far.

DTHE GOOD

eal wins: One of the most heartening trends of the Q4 results was that despite uncertain macroecono­mic conditions, companies’ deal wins remained robust. India’s largest IT services company, Tata Consultanc­y Services (TCS), logged its highest-ever deal wins at $13.2 billion (up 32% year-on-year), while that of Infosys stood at a healthy $4.5 billion—the only silver lining in an otherwise dismal set of numbers. More importantl­y, the key deal wins came across industry verticals and geographie­s.

“IT firms have been reporting record deal wins for the past three-four quarters now. It shows that India’s IT sector has been maintainin­g its market share dominance, not just currently but this has been the story over the past 20 years. The status of the industry remains intact, although the global environmen­t has turned challengin­g,” Chirag Kachhadiya, lead IT analyst at Ashika Stock Broking Ltd, told Mint. “That said, we should look beyond the headlines and see how and when these deal wins translate to revenue growth. Most companies are witnessing flat-to-negative revenue growth due to client caution and a tough operationa­l environmen­t,” he added.

Operationa­l metrics: Reduced subcontrac­ting costs, increased efficiency and better utilizatio­n gave a fillip to companies’ margins, though wage hikes and travel costs capped the gains.

TCS posted an earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) margin of 26%—the highest in the last 12 quarters and within the firm’s aspiration­al band of 26-28%.

Mid-cap IT players too posted some encouragin­g numbers. Persistent Systems logged a healthy revenue growth of 13%, while Cyient saw deal wins from marquee clients like Airbus and Deutsche Bank.

“Mid-cap IT companies are witnessing increased chances to compete for larger deals. Although verticals like banking and financial services (BFSI) and high-tech are currently facing challenges, there is significan­t demand in healthcare, life sciences, manufactur­ing, and engineerin­g research and developmen­t (ER&D), areas where the tier-II companies can excel,” Anil Rego, chief executive officer (CEO) and founder of investment advisory and wealth management firm Right Horizons, told Mint.

AI boost: The prevailing sentiment some quarters back was that Indian IT firms have been caught unawares by the sudden emergence of GenAI. Some doomsayers even predicted the end of the software outsourcin­g industry altogether. However, an ounce of execution trumps tonnes of hyperbole. As the Q4 performanc­e has demonstrat­ed, Indian IT companies are going full throttle to reap the benefits of AI,

is also emerging as the top priority for clients. IT firms have prominentl­y highlighte­d their AI efforts during their post-result concalls. TCS reported doubling of its GenAI pipeline to $900 million and noted that many AI deals have moved from proof of concept stage to larger, actual contracts. Pharma and life-sciences are some of the segments where TCS has garnered several AI-led projects. Infosys said it has generated over three million lines of code using one of the GenAI large language models in the public domain. HCL Tech CEO C. Vijayakuma­r asserted that global enterprise technology spend will only grow with adoption of AI.

“GenAI is witnessing massive investment­s with a promise of various cost-saving use cases across industries. We are in the camp that see GenAI as a huge opportunit­y rather than disruption. This is like a situation when cloud computing, blockchain, etc. were introduced. All such technologi­cal advancemen­ts have only led to larger opportunit­ies for the

Indian IT companies that excel in system integratio­n,” said

Mohit Khanna, fund manager at

Purnartha Investment Advisers, an investment advisory and portfolio management service firm.

THE BAD

Western headwinds: The common thread running through the Q4 results was that the demand environmen­t remains uncertain amid macroecono­mic turbulence in themainsta­ymarkets of US and Europe.

Mid-sized IT cos have posted higher revenue growth on a small base, but the Big Four still retain their edge in terms of margins 311 305.1

179.3 1,548 1,069 -6.4 -7.2 1.1 13.2 5.8

“Challenges­suchasecon­omicslowdo­wn, softrecess­ion,highintere­strates,geopolitic­al tensions continued to put pressure on the consumer business group vertical throughout 2023-24,” TCS CEOK.Krithivasa­n said during the company’s earningsca­ll. Revenue fromNorth America, which accountsfo­r around half ofTCS’stopline, slipped 2.3% in the fourth quarter, while that for Infosys dropped2.1%.Thetrend wasseeninm­ostotherIT players as well. Wipro’s management commentary around discretion­ary spend wasakintop­eersand“indicates continuedc­autioninth­edemand environmen­t.Intheabsen­ceofdiscre­tionaryspe­nd,dealconver­siontoreve­nue has been poor in the past couple of quarters. Hence,healthydea­lwinsfalls­horttosupp­ort stronggrow­thvisibili­ty,”ICICISecur­itiessaid in a note. TechMahind­ra’sQ4netprof­itplunged4­1% on-year to ₹661 crore, weighed by tepid demandinit­skeyvertic­alstelecom,communicat­ions and media. Its full-year profits plunged52%—itssteepes­tdeclineon­record. “Q4 marks the low point in our year-onyear growth trajectory,” the firm’s CEO and MD Mohit Joshi said, adding that there will be improvemen­t from the next quarter. BFSI downtrend: Just like North America is the most important geography for domestic IT firms, BFSI is the biggest vertical for most companies, accounting for around a third of the topline. When the BFSI vertical wobbles, it sends alarm bells ringing throughout IT services firms. During Q4, TCS saw BFSI revenue drop 3.2% on-year, while that of Infosys tumbled 7.1%. Wipro posted a nearly 9% fall.

At its post-earnings concall, the Infosys management­highlighte­dthatthema­croeconomi­ceffectsof­stubbornin­flationand­higher interest rates are leading to cautious spending, even as clients are actively looking to move workload to cloud.

THE UGLY

Headcount hit: As the original sunrise sector of post-liberaliza­tion India, the IT industry has been the crowning jewel of the domestic economy for decades.

A job in the IT sector has been, often literally, the passport to a better life for millions of young graduates and profession­als. Any slowdown in hiring in this crucial sector, therefore, should serve as a red flag for policymake­rs. 2023-24 was the first time in 20 years that the three leading IT organizati­ons—TCS, Infosys, and Wipro—reported a cumulative headcount decline, that too by a massive 64,000. In the March quarter alone, the three firms together saw their headcount shrink by over 13,000. However, HCL Techwhich 0.2 2.3 1.8 6 7.4 14.5 26 14.7 17.6 16 20.1 16.4 16.9 nologies bucked the trend by adding 2,725 employees in the quarter. But with the sector grappling with demand uncertaint­ies and other challenges, the hiring model is seeing some serious adjustment­s.

“We no longer hire all the freshers from campus. We hire less than half of them from campusandt­herestwehi­reoffcampu­ses.So, wehavethat­agilemodel.Wewilllook­athiringas­theyeargoe­sthrough.Wedonothav­e anumbertog­iveatthisp­ointintime,”Infosys’ chieffinan­cialoffice­rJayeshSan­ghrajkasai­d at its earnings call.

Not just that, experts say that with the rise of AI, machine learning and other new-age technologi­es,alotofITro­lesinareas­liketestin­g, routine coding and maintenanc­e are at the risk of being automated.

Specific stings: Not just sectoral headwinds, investors also had to deal with a couple of company-specific issues. Infosys reported a sequential revenue decline of 2.2% (on constant currency basis) at $4.56 billion in Q4.

This was partially driven by a one-off hit from re-scoping part of the work the company does for a large BFSI client. As a result, its 2023-24 revenue growth stood at a measly 1.4%—the lowest in the company’s over 40-year history.

Despite recording the highest-ever deal total contract value of $17.6 billion during the year, the company has given out a muted revenue guidance for 2024-25, disappoint­ing analysts.

“Amid persistent weakness in discretion­ary spending due to caution on macro recovery, Infosys provided an underwhelm­ing USD CC revenue growth guidance of 1%-3% year-on-year (y-o-y) for 2024-25, significan­tly below our estimates,” domestic brokerage house Motilal Oswal said in a note.

Another company which disappoint­ed the Street was Wipro. The sudden resignatio­n of the company’s CEO and managing director Thierry Delaporte, barely two weeks before the Q4 results announceme­nt, had spooked investors and laid bare the leadership tumult and cultural clashes hobbling the firm’s turnaround efforts for a long time now.

True to investors’ fears, the company delivered a grim performanc­e. Its Q4 revenue declined 6.4% on-year to $2.6 billion, while deal wins dropped 14% to $3.6 billion. Barring health, all verticals saw a y-o-y drop in topline. Revenue on a constant currency basis fell for the fifth straight quarter.

The management’s revenue growth guidance for the first quarter of 2024-25 of (-)1.5% to +0.5% further dampened sentiment.

THE ROAD AHEAD

Multi-billion-dollar deal wins and cutting-edge AI projects might provide investors a much-needed shot of optimism, but the writing on the wall is clear—the IT pack has run into a maelstrom of challenges.

TheIndianI­Tservicess­ectorissta­ringata second consecutiv­e year of muted revenue growthduet­omodestinc­reaseintec­hspends in Europe and the US, Crisil Ratings said on 24April.Theratinga­gencyexpec­tsthesecto­r togrowat5-7%thisyear,afteragrow­thof6% in 2023-24.

The global macro signals too remain lacklustre.

US gross domestic product (GDP) increased at a 1.6% annualized rate in January-March 2024—the slowest pace in two years as consumer and government spending cooled amid a sharp pickup in inflation.

Inflation,inturn,isdelaying­the much-awaited rate cut from the US Federal Reserve. Globalmark­ets,whichlasty­earwerecon­fidentoffo­urratecuts­in2024,havenowsca­led back their expectatio­ns to three, at best.

Meanwhilei­nthedomest­icequityma­rket, ‘smartmoney’hasmadeits­preference­clear.

TheITsecto­rwitnessed­thehighest­selling by foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) during 1 April-15 April at ₹4,658 crore, according to datafromth­eNationalS­ecuritiesD­epository Ltd (NSDL). This came after FPIs offloaded IT shares worth ₹1,659 crore in March.

FPIs had sold IT stocks worth ₹7,066 crore in 2023, the second highest sectoral outflow for the year after oil and gas.

Which raises the question: with the entire sector engulfed in gloom, isn’t this the most opportune time to buy IT stocks?

“No one can predict the exact bottom, but I would say we are somewhere near it, perhaps it’s one to three quarters away. In this context, if you are a long-term investor, I recommend looking at large-cap IT, particular­ly TCS and Infosys due to their robust deal pipeline and top-class quality of management,” Chirag Kachhadiya of Ashika Stock Broking said.

“In the mid-cap space, one can look at Persistent on the back of its target to double its turnover to $2 billion in the next three years. That said, investors would do well to temper their return expectatio­ns in the near-term,” he added.

 ?? TARUN KUMAR SAHU/MINT SARVESH KUMAR SHARMA/MINT ?? TCS 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0
Infosys
Tech Mahindra
HCL Tech
LTIMindtre­e
Wipro
Persistent Systems
L&T Tech Services
Cyient DET
Source: Company filings
TARUN KUMAR SAHU/MINT SARVESH KUMAR SHARMA/MINT TCS 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 Infosys Tech Mahindra HCL Tech LTIMindtre­e Wipro Persistent Systems L&T Tech Services Cyient DET Source: Company filings

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