Posts Tagged ‘Infoys’

Infosys numbers miss estimates

January 16th, 2011

Infosys Technologies uncharacteristically failed to meet the Street’s expectations of revenue and profits in the third quarter and sent a frisson of fear through the outsourcing industry by failing to match market forecasts for the crucial fourth quarter (January-March).

The triple whammy sent the stock tumbling and sparked jitters over the performance of the entire technology pack, which is usually treated as the poster boy for India’s service sector that accounts for more than 57 per cent of the country’s GDP.

Infosys indicated that it was well on its way to becoming a $6-billion company by the end of this fiscal, but that did nothing to assuage fears over the brittleness of India’s outsourcing story.

The Bangalore-based company clocked a net profit of Rs 1,780 crore for the quarter, a rise of 14.2 per cent over the corresponding period last year. But the number fell short of the Street’s consensus estimate of Rs 1,820 crore.

For the third quarter, Infosys reported revenues of Rs 7,106 crore, a jump of nearly 24 per cent over Rs 5,741 crore in the same period of 2009-10. However, analysts had forecast Infosys to report revenues of nearly Rs 7,200 crore.

To top it all, Infosys gave a very muted guidance for the fourth quarter and the full year ended March 31.

It said for the year ending March 31, 2011, revenues were likely to be in the range of Rs 27,408 crore to Rs 27,481 crore and EPS in the region of Rs 118.68 to Rs 118.90.

In dollar terms, revenues for the year are expected to be in the range of $6.04-6.06 billion, a growth of 25.7-26.1 per cent. The Street was looking forward to a growth forecast of 27-28 per cent in dollar revenues. For the fourth quarter, revenues are projected to be in the range of Rs 7,157 crore to Rs 7,230 crore.

Analysts said while the third quarter was generally a weak quarter for the sector, other internals did not make for good reading. For instance, a cause for concern was that the volume growth (that contributes to the topline) of 3.1 per cent was the lowest over the past four to five quarters. However, pricing increase of 1.6 per cent during the period was in line with analyst estimates.

“It (the numbers) was a tad disappointing because of lower volume growth and the muted outlook for the fourth quarter,” said Rohit Kumar Anand, analyst at PINC Research. Anand, who has a buy rating on the stock, told The Telegraph that he expected Infosys to do well in the next fiscal as IT spending in the US was expected to improve.

The top management of the IT services behemoth was more cautious in their outlook.

“The weaker economic recovery in developed markets coupled with high unemployment and risk of sovereign default could impact industry growth,” said S. Gopalakrishnan, CEO and managing director.

Investors pummelled the stock, which fell 4.82 per cent, or Rs 162.65, to close at Rs 3,212.30.

The company said it had added 40 clients in the quarter with a gross addition of 11,067 employees. As on December 31, the company had 1,27,779 employees.

Source:http://www.telegraphindia.com/1110114/jsp/business/story_13437975.jsp

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ICG commerce’s 2009 results suggest procurement BPO growth

March 26th, 2010

ICG Commerce, which sell-side analysts at Crag Hallum (an investment bank) suggest is a prime IPO candidate in the coming years, had a strong 2009, according to a recent company press release, adding further fuel to the public offering fire. In their latest announcement from last week, ICG Commerce suggests that “despite the economic challenges” of the past year, the BPO provider “grew revenues by 28 percent in 2009 and increased its spend under management by 33 percent to $13.6 billion.” Management suggests that “this growth reflects ICG Commerce’s specialized focus on procurement outsourcing and the increasing recognition among companies that procurement outsourcing is the next generation strategy for improving financial performance by delivering hundreds of millions in savings across indirect and non-core spend areas.”

For a BPO provider like ICG Commerce, which focuses on outsourcing large areas of indirect (as well as some limited direct and services spend), growing at a 28% clip does not require adding dozens of customers. It just requires adding the right ones, with enough spend and confidence in an outsourcing partner to trust them with their spend. This is, in fact, one of the major challenges in the procurement BPO market. A surprising percentage of deals end without a provider being chosen — and the status spend quo continues. I spent some time visiting ICG Commerce recently and found their expert and process-driven approach to procurement BPO a refreshing change to those models focusing largely on the economic benefits of offshore resources. Clearly, this is an organization that understands all of the areas of the source-to-pay process, as well as which levers to pull to implement and sustain savings (e.g., not just focusing on renegotiating contracts, but also on contracting, vendor management, supplier performance management, invoice auditing, etc.).

Craig Hallum, who would clearly like to get in on an IPO and has had the best coverage of ICGC so far, is unabashed in their praise of the company in a recent brief: “ICG Commerce (ICGC) had another tremendous quarter, posting 30% y/y growth and 22% EBITDA margins during the quarter and ending the year with ~$326 million in backlog. By offering a clear path to cost savings on procurement on an outsourced basis, ICGC has tapped into a tremendous market with a differentiated offering.” Craig Hallum and other analysts are forecasting that ICG Commerce will end 2010 with over $100 million in revenue — which would put them squarely in the top four or five procurement BPOs (it’s a tough exact calculation because of the breakdown of multi-tower deals with some of the larger providers). Craig Hallum further suggests that ICGC “signed 5 new contracts valued at $42 million including Clorox, Pinnacle Foods ($1.6 billion annual revs, 20 categories of spend),” among other deals in 2009. They also expanded relationships “with 4 clients,” including one where they increased “spend under management by 400%.”

Clearly, in the world of better known multi-tower BPOs, ICG Commerce is carving out a solid niche for itself. Stay tuned for further coverage of ICGC on Spend Matters as we continue to expand our investigation of procurement BPO firms in 2010. I look forward to continuing to double-click on ICGC, CGE&Y, Infosys, Genpact and Accenture (not to mention IBM, which we profiled last year in a four-part series).

Source:http://www.spendmatters.com/index.cfm/2010/3/25/ICG-Commerces-2009-Results-Suggest-Procurement-BPO-Growth

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Good times return for Indian IT workers

March 7th, 2010

Indian software engineer Prithvi Sen has a spring in his step after getting re-hired by the country’s flagship outsourcing industry,Hiringwhich is shaking off the effects of the global recession.

“I was unemployed and it was tough, but I’ve got work again,” said the 26-year-old Sen, who landed a job recently with a small outsourcing company in India’s high-tech hub of Bangalore.

Sen is benefiting from a hiring wave by India’s outsourcing sector which is set to increase recruitment by nearly 70 per cent in the next financial year, according to the National Association of Software and Services Companies (Nasscom).

India’s big three outsourcing companies — Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Infosys and Wipro — all have plans to boost hiring sharply in the coming financial year.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/news-by-industry/jobs/Good-times-return-for-Indian-IT-workers/articleshow/5653383.cms

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India’s Infosys plans wage hikes in april

March 4th, 2010

Infosys Technologies (INFY.BO), India’s No. 2 IT services exporter, plans to raise wages for all its staff by 8-12 percent in April on a rebound in demand for outsourcing services, media reports said on Thursday. Infosys and its rivals such as Tata Consultancy Services (TCS.BO) and Wipro (WIPR.BO) had put off their annual wage hikes in April last year as global recession crimped investments on technology services by their clients.

Technology

Nasdaq-listed Infosys (INFY.O) announced wage rises in October last year for this fiscal year ending in March.

“Yes, we are considering a wage hike in April. We expect business to be normal in the coming year and as in a normal year, we give hikes every April,” the Economic Times quoted an Infosys spokeswoman as saying to its TV channel ET NOW.

“The hikes will be across the board,” she said.

A spokeswoman for Bangalore-based Infosys was not immediately available for comment.

Business Standard newspaper said, without quoting sources, Infosys was planning 8-12 percent wage hikes in April.

It said outsourcing firms such as Tata Consultancy and Wipro were also planning salary increases between 8 percent and 12 percent for the financial year beginning in April on improved business environment.

Wages at Indian software companies had been rising by 10-15 percent before the slowdown, as outsourcers struggled to keep staff from being poached by global rivals such as IBM (IBM.N) and Accenture (ACN.N) who hire by thousands in India. High wages crimp the profit margins of the export-driven IT services exporters.

Source:http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSSGE62303520100304

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BUDGET VIEW: India’s IT industry seeks tax sop extension

February 19th, 2010

India’s export-driven IT sector has sought an extension of a key tax benefit scheme to beyond its 2011 deadline in next week’s federal budget, which industry players say will help small and medium technology companies.

The software industry wants units in software technology parks or STPIs to be treated at par with special economic zones or SEZs, which are duty-free economic enclaves where units can claim tax breaks for longer than 10 years, besides other perks. “One of our demands is that STPI units get the same benefits as SEZ units keeping in mind the small and medium enterprises,” said Som Mittal, president of National Association of Software and Services Cos (NASSCOM), a software lobby.

“Large companies are already in the 21-22 percent tax bracket so they will not be impacted by the extension of the STPI scheme. There will be no loss to the exchequer too as these big companies are paying these taxes,” Mittal said.

The government had introduced the Software Technology Parks of India (STPI) scheme in 1991 to encourage software exports, which helped make India one of the world’s leading hubs for software and business process outsourcing.

In its budget last July, the government had extended tax benefits for units in STPI by a year to March 2011. Units set up in these parks are eligible for a 10-year tax holiday, besides other perks.

Mid-cap companies such as MindTree and HCL Technologies Ltd are likely to benefit from the extension, said Harit Shah, technology analyst with Karvy Stock Broking. “We expect a further extension in light of the fact that the industry has just recovered from a severe global slowdown, with mid-sized IT companies, in particular, bearing the brunt of slowing order flows,” Shah said.

EDUCATION SOPS

NASSCOM has also asked the government to increase its outlay for education and e-governance schemes, including the Unique Identification (UID) project.

A financial crisis in the United States, which accounts for more then 50 percent of India’s software exports, saw the sector’s revenue growth slow to 16 percent in 2008/09 from the 20-percent clip of the pre-Lehman crisis years.

Earlier in the month, NASSCOM lowered its forecast by 7-8 percent for India’s software and services exports for 2010/11 to $56-57 billion. It expects revenue in the sector, led by top outsourcers Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys and Wipro, to hit $49.7 billion this fiscal.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/infotech/software/BUDGET-VIEW-Indias-IT-industry-seeks-tax-sop-extension/articleshow/5591941.cms

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Infy CEO brushes aside Obama tirade

February 14th, 2010

A day after US president Barack Obama lashed out at American companies outsourcing to India, tech major Infosys Technologies brushed aside the apprehensions that the remarks were aimed at Indian companies.

Kris Gopalakrishnan, CEO and MD of Infosys, said Obama’s remarks were aimed at US companies that have operations in multiple countries.

“What he (Obama) is talking about is US companies setting up operations outside of the US, not about outsourcing to India. That is very clear. But it is not about us as far as I can see,” Gopalakrishnan said on the sidelines of a function here.

Obama had said it was time to slash tax breaks for companies that ship jobs overseas and give exemptions to those that create jobs in the US.

Source:http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/infy-ceo-brushes-aside-obama-tirade/385649/

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IT firms plan new strategies for 2010

February 11th, 2010

Coming out of the shadow of a global slowdown, Indian information technology service providers are preparing themselves for the road ahead by reviewing strategies of the past years and taking note of recent advancements.

India’s  second largest IT company, Infosys Technologies, for instance, has narrowed on the new areas to drive its growth.

Emerging markets is clearly one. It has identified seven themes that include technologies like cloud computing; smart organisations that drive efficiency by using collaboration; specific industry verticals like health care and banking; and sustainability.

“We have been working on some of these aspects over the last two years and we are seeing better clarity now. These are large teams in which we have invested large amounts,” Kris Gopalakrishnan, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys, told Business Standard at the Nasscom Leadership Forum in Mumbai  on Thursday.

Despite this, he remains cautious. “While we are watchful, I feel the worst is behind us. As an industry, our model is established today. Our market shares are good. Investment in technology will continue to grow globally by 4–5 per cent. From an Infosys point of view, our endeavour has been to be part of that growth and match the industry growth, and we will continue to drive that,” he added.

The industry has begun investing heavily in manpower development, with an average training period of three to four months for fresh recruits and additional training over the employee cycle.

Companies are also set to hire again in 2010. Direct employment by the country’s IT industry is expected to be 2.3 million by March 31, with 90,000 jobs added during the current financial year.

But, they also feel just adding to headcount is no longer enough. Growing this way (termed linear) could pose formidable challenges over the next few years.

Hence, HCL , Tata Consultancy Services , IBM, Infosys, Satyam , Wipro , Genpact, and NIIT  are among those who had implemented a host of non-linear initiatives like the reuse of assets and codes, the creation of templates and intellectual property and the use of platform BPOs.

The concept has been around for over a year, and the platform model is also known as software as a service for BPO.

These initiatives are paying dividends by increasing companies’ operating margins per employee, while simultaneously reducing capital expenditure for their clients, according to analysts.

Platform BPO, for instance, involves a bundling of technology, consulting and BPO, and helps in offering models which can be replicated, with some customisation for new customers instead of reinventing the wheel. Around 40 per cent of all IT services are estimated to come as templates. This helps in saving costs.

Others like Raman Roy, CMD of Quatrro, are going after the small and medium business sector to drive business.

“The company has around 4,000 SMEs as clients and expects a 30 per cent increase in business volume this year,” he said. And, that Quatrro can cut through the outsourcing noise with a large base of SMEs as its clients and by selectively focusing on industries.

Others are diversifying their portfolios. Realising that the US financial sector was slowing, which was nearly 80 per cent of Headstrong’s business, Arjun Malhotra, Chairman & CEO, had to take some tough decisions.

“We had a huge bench (staffers with no work) due to our banking clients pulling out last year and that just led to a steep rise in labour costs. We had to cut staff due to clients who had lost money and no longer needed us,” he said. The company is now looking to widen the client base beyond the top 20 banks it dealt with earlier.

The good news, meanwhile, is that with business picking up, bigger deals are back, too. Salil Parekh, CEO (financial services), Capgemini, said it was beginning to look at winning some large client deals.

Source:http://business.rediff.com/report/2010/feb/11/tech-it-firms-plan-new-strategies-for-2010.htm

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