Posts Tagged ‘Profit’

Infosys Profit Beats Estimates After Orders Increase

October 12th, 2011

Infosys Ltd., India’s second-largest software exporter, reported second-quarter profit that beat analysts’ estimates as customers increased spending on outsourcing.

Net income rose 9.8 percent to 19.1 billion rupees ($387 million) in the three months ended Sept. 30, from 17.4 billion rupees a year earlier, Bangalore-based Infosys said in a statement today. That compares with the 18.7 billion rupee median of 35 analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Infosys joins larger rival Accenture Plc in reporting profit that exceeded analysts’ estimates, reflecting increasing spending by businesses on information technology services. The Indian code-writer renewed an outsourcing contract with Alcoa Inc. for five more years, and sold its banking software to Philippines-based City Saving Bank.

“Some companies are hiking their IT budgets for 2012, and by a substantial number, at that,” said Pralay Kumar Das, an analyst with Elara Securities India Pvt. in Mumbai. He has an “accumulate” rating on Infosys stock. “The American incumbent IT players are doing very well, and in fact are raising their guidance. If there’s no reason for them to say demand in Europe and U.S. is falling off, then I don’t see why it should be the case for Indian vendors.”

Revenue in the quarter totaled 81 billion rupees compared with 69.5 billion rupees a year earlier, the company said.

Infosys said it will pay an interim dividend of 15 rupees a share.

Source:http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-12/infosys-profit-beats-estimates-on-increased-demand-for-computing-services.html

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Wipro Profit Climbs 14%

April 27th, 2011

India’s Wipro Ltd. Wednesday said its January-March consolidated net profit rose nearly 14%, helped by a strong increase in outsourcing demand.
Consolidated net profit for the fourth quarter was 13.75 billion rupees ($309.6 million), compared with 12.09 billion rupees a year earlier.

Consolidated revenue rose a little more than 18% to 83.02 billion rupees from 70.16 billion rupees. The figure includes revenue from information technology services, IT products, consumer care and the company’s lighting business.

All numbers are based on international accounting standards.

The net profit was a tad below expectations. The average of forecasts from 28 analysts polled was for a net profit of 13.77 billion rupees on revenue of 82.34 billion rupees.

Wipro, listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange as well as the New York Stock Exchange, expects IT services revenue to be between $1.394 billion and $1.422 billion for the quarter through June.

Source:http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703778104576287980387955642.html

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Tata Consultancy Net Profit Rises 23%

April 22nd, 2011

Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. Thursday exceeded market expectations with a 23% jump in fourth-quarter net profit, driven by higher non-operating income and increased demand for outsourcing of technology services.

India’s largest software exporter by revenue has consistently beaten analyst estimates over the last two years, consolidating the local technology sector’s growth story. Indian software exporters have been gaining from increased demand for technology outsourcing work as businesses in developed markets recover from the global economic slowdown.

Based on U.S. accounting standards, TCS posted a consolidated net profit of 24.02 billion rupees ($543 million) in the three months through March, compared with 19.48 billion rupees a year earlier. Profit grew 3.1% from the previous three months.

Net profit was boosted by a 39% jump in non-operating income to 2.26 billion rupees from 1.63 billion rupees a year earlier.

Revenue rose 31% to 101.57 billion rupees, as it added 39 clients during the quarter. On a sequential basis, revenue grew 5.1%.

The average of estimates in a poll of 27 analysts was for a net profit of 23.64 billion rupees on revenue of 101.53 billion rupees.

TCS follows fourth-ranked HCL Technologies Ltd. in reporting robust earnings growth, after a disappointing performance by Infosys Technologies Ltd. last week. Infosys, the second-largest IT firm, posted a lower-than-expected increase in quarterly profit and gave a weak outlook for this fiscal year, but HCL Wednesday reported a strong 34% rise in net profit thanks to a 4.8% growth in the volume of outsourcing work.

“TCS results are solid across most parameters,” CLSA Asia Pacific said in a note. The strong revenue growth should allay investor concerns on industry-wide demand, which had arisen after poor results from Infosys Technologies Ltd., the brokerage said.

The company’s shares, however, fell on profit-taking after the results and closed down 2.2% at 1,195.65 rupees. TCS shares had climbed 4.6% Wednesday, in line with a sharp rise in other technology stocks after HCL’s robust earnings. The Bombay Stock Exchange’s benchmark Sensitive Index rose 0.7% Thursday.

TCS, which doesn’t give a financial outlook, posted a tepid 2.9% rise in business volume in the fourth quarter. It cited seasonal weakness as the reason for the muted rise as clients, finalizing their budgets, pulled back spending on technology.

Still, top company executives were bullish.

“The demand environment continues to be vibrant. There are opportunities across markets and industries,” Chief Executive N. Chandrasekaran said in a statement.
India is one of the most preferred technology outsourcing destinations for companies in the U.S. and Europe. A recent report by research firm Forrester said technology spending in the U.S. is expected to increase 8% to $805 billion in 2011 and that growth would come largely from businesses looking to invest in IT projects.
TCS gets more than 80% of its revenue from the U.S. and Europe–the largest outsourcing markets in the world.

The company also said it hired 11,700 employees on a net basis during the fourth quarter and plans to hire 60,000 people this fiscal year to meet the expected rise in demand for outsourcing services. Its total staff count was 198,614 at the end of March.

CLSA said strong hiring in the just-ended quarter indicates that TCS is preparing for a big year ahead in 2011 and it validates the strength of a recovery in demand.
But, some worries remain.

An appreciation in the Indian rupee–the local currency is up 1% against the U.S. dollar in 2011–and higher staff wages due to intensifying competition in the technology sector is pressuring profit margins at TCS.

Chief Financial Officer S. Mahalingam said a stronger rupee and wage increases may weigh on operating margin in the current quarter.

The company increased wages of its India staff by 12%-14% and those in major overseas markets by about 2% to 4%, effective April 1.
Increased expenses and rising share of work from offshore centers led to fourth-quarter operating margin shrinking to 28% from 28.1% in the previous three months, Mr. Mahalingam said.

The margin, however, grew from the 27.5% it posted a year earlier.

Mr. Mahalingam said the rupee’s almost 1% decline on average against the dollar in the fourth quarter supported TCS’s margin by 0.6 percentage point.
“While certain headwinds remain in the near-term and medium-term global macro-horizon, we remain confident of our ability to mitigate challenges as well as sustain business growth,” he added.

India’s largest software exporter by revenue has consistently beaten analyst estimates over the last two years, consolidating the local technology outsourcing sector’s growth story. Indian software exporters have been gaining from increased demand for technology outsourcing work as businesses in developed markets recover from the global economic slowdown.

Based on U.S. accounting standards, TCS posted a consolidated net profit of 24.02 billion rupees ($543 million) in the three months through March, compared with 19.48 billion rupees a year earlier. Profit grew 3.1% from the previous three months.

Net profit was boosted by a 39% jump in non-operating income to 2.26 billion rupees from 1.63 billion rupees a year earlier.

Revenue rose 31% to 101.57 billion rupees from 77.37 billion rupees, as it added 39 clients during the quarter. On a sequential basis, revenue grew 5.1%.

The average of estimates in a poll of 27 analysts was for a net profit of 23.64 billion rupees on revenue of 101.53 billion rupees.

The results, however, failed to lift investor sentiment and the company’s shares slipped. The shares provisionally closed down 2.6% at 1,187 rupees, lagging the 0.5% rise in the benchmark Sensitive Index.

TCS follows fourth-ranked HCL Technologies Ltd. in reporting robust earnings growth, after a disappointing performance by Infosys Technologies Ltd. last week.

Infosys, the second-largest IT firm, posted a lower-than-expected increase in quarterly profit and gave a weak outlook for the current fiscal year, but HCL Wednesday reported a strong 34% rise in net profit thanks to a 4.8% growth in the volume of outsourcing work.

TCS, which doesn’t give a financial outlook, posted a tepid 2.9% rise in business volume in the fourth quarter. It cited seasonal weakness as the reason for the muted rise as clients, finalizing their budgets, pulled back spending on technology.
Still, top company executives are bullish.

“The demand environment continues to be vibrant. There are opportunities across markets and industries,” Chief Executive N. Chandrasekaran said in a statement.
India is one of the most preferred technology outsourcing destinations for companies in the U.S. and Europe. A recent report by research firm Forrester said technology spending in the U.S. is expected to increase 8% to $805 billion in 2011 and that growth would come largely from businesses looking to invest in IT projects.
TCS gets more than 80% of its revenue from the U.S. and Europe.

“While certain headwinds remain in the near-term and medium-term global macro-horizon, we remain confident of our ability to mitigate challenges as well as sustain business growth,” Chief Financial Officer S. Mahalingam said.

He also said that TCS’s operating margin in the fourth quarter shrank to 28% from 28.1% in the previous three months, hurt by higher expenses and increased work from offshore centers. But, the margin grew from the 27.5% it posted a year earlier.

The company added 11,700 employees on a net basis in the fourth quarter to take its total staff count to 198,614.

Source:http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703983704576276381378414022.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

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Infosys Profit Up 19 Percent, But Misses Expectations

April 19th, 2011

Infosys Technologies reported an 18.9 percent rise in quarterly profit in dollar terms Friday, missing expectations as expenses, global uncertainty and a rising rupee squeezed margins.
Investors, who were also unsettled by a tepid outlook for earnings growth and the decision of key board member T.V. Mohandas Pai to retire, sent the bellwether stock down 9.6 percent Friday.
Infosys rarely misses expectations and the news offered a disappointing kickoff to earnings season for India’s $60 billion software services sector, which has been pinched by wage hikes and a rising rupee.
Net profit at India’s No. 2 outsourcing company was 18.2 billion rupees ($402 million) for the quarter ending March. Revenues grew 23.6 percent in dollar terms, to 72.5 billion rupees ($1.6 billion).
Analysts surveyed by FactSet had expected a quarterly profit of 18.5 billion rupees ($414 million) on sales of 73.6 billion rupees ($1.65 billion).
“We are factoring in that the rupee is getting stronger,” said Ashok Vemuri, head of global banking for Infosys. “We are seeing the fact that there continues to be wage pressure. We have to factor that in especially in India.”
Europe’s debt crisis and Japan’s debilitating quake added to slowness — particularly in financial services revenues- in the March quarter, which is generally soft as clients finalize their IT budgets, he added.
Vemuri said a few Japanese banks pulled back on new projects following March’s devastating tsunami, but anticipates that cost pressures in Europe will ultimately be a boon for the company.
“Even though we may not get a lot of revenue from Japan, the effect of Japan will be felt for a longer period than we give it credit,” he said. “The issues in Europe will be beneficial for us in throwing up interesting opportunities. They realize they have been left behind on the tech curve and they are facing significant cost pressure.”
He said that despite fears of another protectionist surge in advance of U.S. elections, American clients are sending more work offshore than last year.
“We are not hearing our clients talk about protectionism,” he said. “They have increased the percentage of work they give to offshoring companies.”
Kotak Securities analyst Dipen Shah said earnings guidance in rupee terms was lower than expected for the year.
“They are taking into account most of the negatives,” he said. “This may prove to be conservative going ahead.”
Infosys said earnings for this fiscal year, which ends in March 2012, would be 126.05 rupees to 128.21 rupees ($2.83 to $2.88) per share, up 5.5 percent to 7.3 percent in rupee terms from the prior year. Revenues for the fiscal year should come in between 317.3 billion rupees and 322.7 billion rupees ($7.13 billion to $7.25 billion), annual growth of 15.4 percent to 17.3 percent in rupee terms.
While the rising rupee will likely hit margins by 1 percentage point, the company’s outlook for 10 to 12 percent wage hikes for offshore employees this fiscal year represents less wage pressure than last fiscal, when a fight for talent helped drive up salaries at Indian outsourcing companies by 12 to 14 percent, said Shah.
Infosys is also undergoing an unsettling shift of top management. Human resources head T.V. Mohandas Pai said Friday he will retire in June.
Vemuri said Pai plans to dedicate himself to “nation-building” in the field of education, but declined to say whether Pai would work for the government like Infosys co-founder Nandan Nilekani, who left the company to helm India’s ambitious national identification program.
Company co-founder K. Dinesh will also retire in June.
Ravi Venkatesan, former chairman of Microsoft India, was appointed to the board of directors on Friday, a move to be confirmed by shareholders at the next generalmeeting.

Board chairman N.R. Narayana Murthy plans to retire in August. The board said it would meet in April to hammer out succession plans.

Source:http://www.newsfactor.com/news/Infosys-Earnings-Miss-Expectations/story.xhtml?story_id=10200A66RB10

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Unisys 3Q profit sinks 54 pct, server sales drop

October 29th, 2010

Unisys Corp. said Tuesday its third-quarter profit tumbled 54 percent, as sales of the technology services provider’s ClearPath servers fell and revenue dropped.

The Blue Bell, Pa., company said it earned $28.3 million, or 65 cents per share, in the three months that ended Sept. 30. That’s down from net income of $61.1 million, or $1.48 per share, in the same quarter a year ago.

Revenue fell 13 percent to $961 million from $1.11 billion.

Shares of Unisys sank 22.6 percent, or $7.05, to $24.15 in Tuesday afternoon trading.

The company grew IT outsourcing revenue slightly, but U.S. revenue fell 15 percent to $438 million, and international revenue dropped 12 percent to $523 million.

“After three straight quarters of strong growth, sales of our ClearPath servers declined, impacting our net income comparisons against a strong third quarter a year ago,” Chairman and CEO Ed Coleman said in a statement from the company.

He also noted that the company’s operating expenses and cash flow improved “significantly,” which reflected improved efficiencies.

Selling, general and administrative expenses fell 12 percent to $142.4 million, and research and development expenses were down 22 percent to $18.9 million.

Source:http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9J3HOC00.htm

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Infosys quarterly profit dips but sees upturn

April 14th, 2010

Indian outsourcing giant Infosys Technologies reported Tuesday quarterly net profit had slipped, but forecast better times ahead despite a rising rupee that could eat into earnings.

Infosys, the country’s second-largest outsourcing exporter by revenues, said consolidated net profit in the fiscal fourth quarter to end-March 2010 fell 0.9 percent year on year to 16 billion rupees (359 million dollars).

“We have emerged stronger from a tough quarter,” company chief executive S. Gopalakrishnan said.

“I strongly believe that unless something dramatic happens we are again back on a growth curve,” he said. Clients “are investing in growth.”

Shares of Infosys, traditionally the first of India’s outsourcing companies to report earnings and regarded as the bellwether of the flagship sector, closed up 3.69 percent or 99.1 rupees at 2,782.35 rupees.

Rival Tata Consultancy Services, which announces its results next Monday, climbed 2.8 percent or 22.35 rupees to 819.95 rupees.

Infosys chief financial officer V. Balakrishnan said the strengthening rupee was “a cause for concern” and would put pressure on earning margins.
India’s outsourcing industry bills in dollars and a weaker US currency translates into lower Indian rupee earnings.

But he said Infosys “has an active hedging programme to minimise” the impact of the rise of the rupee, which gained 3.6 percent against the dollar in the last quarter alone as global investors bet on a strong Indian economy.
The profit posted by Infosys was slightly below market estimates.

The profit decline came despite a 13 percent rise in revenues to 59.44 billion rupees in the fourth quarter and a one-off gain of 480 million rupees from the sale of an investment in OnMobile Systems Inc.

But Infosys, known for its conservative guidance for markets, forecast consolidated revenues for the full financial year to March 2011 would grow by 16 to 18 percent in dollar terms to as much as 5.67 billion dollars as business conditions globally pick up.

“Overall, the scenario has improved compared to eight to 12 months back, but we’re still not back to pre-(financial) crisis levels — the boom times,” Apurva Shah, research head at Mumbai brokerage Prabhudas Lilladher.
Infosys and other outsourcing companies have made India a top business destination by offering software development and information technology, engineering and design, and business process outsourcing (BPO).

India’s outsourcing sector was hit particularly hard by the recession in the United States, which accounts for 60 percent of the Indian industry’s revenues. Many businesses put IT spending on hold during the slump.

But lately Indian outsourcing companies have reported a more buoyant US market. A recent study by Massachusetts-based Forrester Research Inc forecast US information technology spending would increase by 8.4 percent in 2010 after bottoming out in the calendar 2009 third quarter.

There is a “strong demand environment going down the line,” Tarun Sisodia, head of research at Mumbai brokerage Anand Rathi, told India’s CNBC network.

In the quarter, Infosys, which had been cutting prices to retain customers and attract new ones in the key US and European markets during the global financial crisis, said it added 47 clients.

Infosys, which like other Indian outsourcers has increased hiring to be ready for better demand globally, added 3,914 employees during the quarter to bring its total worker headcount to 113,796.

“We will focus on employees and do everything we can to keep them happy,” said Mohandas Pai, Infosys human resources head.

Source:http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gkZ0yF4dPDF54sSsqhmyTYQ3Rr0w

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