Categories: TechnologyWorld

India’s HCLTech sees smaller-than-expected FY revenue growth on budget cuts

 HCLTech, India’s No.3 IT services exporter, on Thursday forecast lower-than-expected revenue growth for the current fiscal due to cuts in discretionary spending and project ramp-downs amid worries of a global recession.

HCLTech’s weak outlook followed disappointing earnings from market leader Tata Consultancy Services and No.2 Infosys Ltd’s forecast of single-digit revenue growth this financial year.

HCLTech said it expects revenue to increase 6%-8% in the financial year ending March 2024 on a constant currency basis, missing average analysts’ estimates of 10.42%, according to Refinitiv IBES data.

“In tech and telecom, growth decelerated in the second half (of the year). There is still pressure in the segment and rampdowns. We think most of the pain is behind us. But the environment across the board has been volatile,” CEO C Vijayakumar said.

There is some stress in terms of deals as well as project ramp-up delays, especially on the discretionary spending side, Vijayakumar added.

Indian IT services companies, especially the larger ones, are likely to be hit by the turmoil in the U.S. and European financial ecosystem since mid-March as they account for a lion’s share of revenue both by geography and sector.

However, HCLTech said that its exposure to the U.S. banking crisis was very limited.

“We do see a deterioration in the demand environment, especially on the telecommunication and manufacturing verticals, which also becomes evident in the FY24 revenue guidance,” said Manish Chowdhury, head of research at Stoxbox.

HCLTech reported a 10.9% rise in consolidated net profit at 39.83 billion rupees ($484.93 million) for the quarter ended March 31.

Its earnings before income tax (EBIT) margins fell to 18.18% from 19.6% in the previous quarter. It expects EBIT margins of 18%-19% for FY 2024.

The company’s revenue from operations rose 17.7% to 266.06 billion rupees.

Source : Reuters

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

Trump’s mortgage-backed bond purchases not moving needle on housing costs

Experts say $200bln bond-buying effort unlikely to significantly lower housing costs.  There's scant evidence so…

2 days ago

Trump tariff shift calms European bond market

That has helped ⁠at least to put a floor under euro zone bond prices. Euro…

2 days ago

Vision 2030 projects may drive corporate loans by Saudi banks to $75bln in 2026

Bank profitability will remain strong this year despite lower interest rates, says S&P. Saudi banks…

2 days ago

Europe’s emissions trading system is an ally, not an enemy, of industrial competitiveness

The 2026 review of the EU ETS must be anchored in facts and focus on…

2 days ago

How the Fed makes decisions: Disagreement, beliefs, and the power of the Chair

Federal Open Market Committee statements typically sound unanimous, but the Committee’s internal debates rarely are.…

2 days ago

Femicides, anti-violence centres, and policy targeting

Local responses to gender-based violence, with femicide as its most extreme form, remain uneven across…

2 days ago