Khaleej Times

Infosys profit rises on client wins, one-time tax benefit

- Saritha Rai

bangalore — Infosys posted a 38 per cent surge in third-quarter profit on a tax benefit and investment­s in digital technologi­es as its new chief executive officer maintained forecasts for slowing sales growth.

Net income was 51.3 billion rupees ($806 million) in the three months ended December, compared with the 36.1 billion rupee average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The company booked a $225 million gain, part of a series of tax-provision reversals agreed upon with US tax authoritie­s. Sales rose just 3 per cent in the quarter.

The earnings announceme­nt is the first since Salil Parekh took over as chief executive officer last week after a boardroom tussle that ushered out Vishal Sikka. Asia’s second-largest software services company had been an investor favorite before a very public clash between its directors and several founders over corporate governance issues. Parekh’s pledged to keep steering Infosys away from a traditiona­lly labor-intensive model.

“Infosys results are decent, actually positive as there is no negative,” said Sushant Kumar, fund manager at Mumbai-based Raay Global Investment­s Pvt. “After Sikka’s exit, market was expecting a status quo on results front and it came.”

Full-year revenue will rise 5.5 to 6.5 per cent in constant currency terms, while in US dollars growth is projected at 6.5 to 7.5 per cent, a prediction that was cut last year after the boardroom upheaval. Sales in fiscal 2017 rose 9.7 per cent.

Infosys shares traded 0.3 per cent higher on Friday in Mumbai

Infosys results are decent, actually positive as there is no negative Sushant Kumar, Fund manager, Raay Global Investment­s Pvt

before the earnings were released, extending its gain in the past year to 7.8 per cent.

Parekh, a former board member at Capgemini SE, has a master’s degree in computer science from Cornell University and has a reputation for being affable but aggressive. The 53-year-old CEO will need to draw on those attributes in navigating the relationsh­ip with Infosys’s powerful founder-cohort. Chief among them is former chairman Narayana Murthy, who last year attacked large pay hikes for senior executives as well as generous exit packages for departing executives. Parekh plans to lay out strategic priorities after April. “We are progressin­g towards stability and are well positioned to serve our clients in the new areas of demand,” Parekh said in the earnings statement. India’s $154-billion IT services industry is investing heavily in cloud- and artificial intelligen­cebased services to jump-start growth, as clients in key segments such as banking and finance turn increasing­ly to automation.

“Infosys Q3 results suggest that the company is slowly and steadily heading toward stability,” says Praveen Bhadada, Gurgaon-based global head, digital, Zinnov Management Consulting Pvt. “In line with its major competitor­s, Infosys would need to carve out a comprehens­ive strategy to be part of the digital transforma­tion spends of its clients.”

Infosys reported earnings a day after larger rival Tata Consultanc­y Services Ltd. posted quarterly profit that matched expectatio­ns.

 ?? — AFP ?? Infosys Q3 results suggest that the company is slowly and steadily heading towards stability.
— AFP Infosys Q3 results suggest that the company is slowly and steadily heading towards stability.

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