Tuesday

22-04-2025 Vol 19

Indian IT’s Moment Of Uncertainty

Indian IT isn’t in crisis — not yet. But the signals flashing from the March quarter results of TCS, Infosys, and Wipro are hard to ignore. Growth is stalling, client spending is softening, and confidence, once a fixture of management commentary, has given way to caution. This isn’t just another muted quarter. It’s a convergence of structural and cyclical stress: a slowdown in the West, tariff shocks from Washington, and a rapidly shifting technology landscape led by generative AI. For an industry built on predictability, the current moment feels unusually opaque. What’s more concerning is not that growth has dipped, but that no one, not even the biggest players, seems sure when or how it returns.

A slowdown made in America: Much of the current stress has its roots in the global economy, and specifically in the United States, which remains the biggest market for Indian IT exports. Elevated interest rates, inflation, and the spectre of a Trump-led tariff war have injected fresh volatility into corporate decision-making. President Donald Trump’s tariff policies – including reciprocal duties on tech equipment, data infrastructure components, and software services – are stoking fears of a trade war, one that could push the US into a recession. In this scenario, discretionary IT spending has become the first casualty. As Motilal Oswal notes in its April outlook: “The fallout from the Liberation Day tariffs has wreaked havoc on Indian IT service stocks, pushing the sector into the eye of the storm. Discretionary spend is likely to be put on hold again.”

Big Three, shrinking margins: The numbers tell their own story. TCS reported its slowest revenue growth in four years — ₹64,479 crore in Q4FY25 — and a marginal 1.7 per cent decline in profit after tax. Infosys fared worse, with an 11.75 per cent drop in net profit and revenue guidance for FY26 that ranged from flat to 3 per cent, its lowest forecast since the 2008 crisis, Wipro, under new CEO Srinivas Pallia, warned of a 3.5 per cent to 1.5 per cent revenue decline in Q1FY26, despite a 26 per cent jump in net profit. Across all three firms, client sentiment is muted. Key verticals like BFSI, retail, and manufacturing are deferring tech upgrades and digital transformations. Large deals are being won, but implementation is delayed. Discretionary projects — the growth engine of the past decade — are drying up. Infosys CFO Jayesh Sanghrajka said their guidance “bakes in some deterioration in the environment.” Salil Parekh, the CEO, added that “things can change quickly,” but for now, the narrative remains tentative.

Discretionary is dead, survival is in: Indian IT leaders have admitted the problem: clients are cutting back, and budgets are being reallocated toward essential, not expansive, IT programmes. “Discretionary is dead. Survival spend will now become the clear priority,” said Motilal Oswal in its latest sector note. This is a significant pivot. In the post-COVID boom, clients were bullish on transformation. That phase has reversed. The new mantra is cost efficiency, vendor consolidation, and automation. “With the new technology cycle ongoing, we now see the likelihood of a ‘transition phase’ as spend gets reprioritized and growth rates moderate for a prolonged period. In this context, we lower our revenue growth forecasts for the sector as a whole for F26-27,” Morgan Stanley said in its report. Analysts now expect only 1–4 per cent constant currency growth across large-cap Indian IT firms in FY26 — a far cry from the double-digit growth of previous years.

Enter GenAI: disruption or redemption? Generative AI could be the disruptor that Indian IT wasn’t ready for — or the savior that reinvents it. Motilal Oswal’s view is more nuanced. “Economic shocks often mark the beginning of new tech cycles — and GenAI’s moment may have finally arrived.” The brokerage draws parallels to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (GFC), which spurred spending on risk and compliance technology, and the COVID-19 pandemic, which accelerated cloud adoption. GenAI, it argues, could become just as central, especially in areas like customer service, claims automation, and software maintenance.

But even they caution that the road to GenAI monetisation is not smooth: “What was once a hammer in search of a nail may finally find traction — provided it can demonstrate productivity gains at scale.” Mid-tier momentum and long-term bets Amid the storm, mid-tier players such as Coforge, Persistent Systems, and L&T Technology Services are showing more resilience. With specialised offerings, vertical expertise, and leaner structures, they’re capturing cost-driven deals that are eluding the giants. Jefferies India expects these firms to post stronger Q4 results, and investors are taking notice. Furthermore, history shows that downturns often prompt companies to outsource more. As Western firms seek to reduce fixed costs, Indian IT’s value proposition — scale, cost arbitrage, domain talent — remains intact.

Breaking point or turning point?

The Indian IT sector may well be at a crossroads. FY26 is unlikely to be a year of growth in the conventional sense. Still, it could become a transformational year in hindsight — one where companies reset priorities, invest in automation, and align to the AI-first future. However, brokerage firm Nuvama believes that all is not lost for the IT sector. “While the technology spends (mainly discretionary) might be delayed or pushed back by a quarter or two, we do not expect them to be delayed longer or indefinitely. Corporates across the world (especially the US) have been in a hold-the-spends mode for over two years now, awaiting clarity on the macro environment.

The further they delay their technology spends, the further they are likely to fall behind in the tech adoption race,” the brokerage firm said in its report. For now, Indian IT must navigate a climate of shrinking margins, cautious clients, and technological reinvention. The choice is stark: automate, or be automated. Those who embrace the shift, lead on GenAI, and adapt to new delivery models may not just survive — they may end up defining the next decade of global tech services.

K Giriprakash is a Bangalore-based business journalist who covers the corporate sector. He is also the author of The Vijay Mallya Story, published by Penguin Random House.

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