A man walks past a billboard of Infosys Technologies Ltd’s office in Bangalore, capital of the southern state of Karnataka, October 10, 2003. REUTERS/Jagadeesh NV KK/FA
India’s Infosys lifts revenue forecast as digital transformation fuels IT demand
BENGALURU, Jan 12 (Reuters) – India’s Infosys Ltd on Wednesday bumped up its annual revenue forecast and posted a near 12% jump in quarterly profit, riding on strong demand for its software services from businesses accelerating their digital transformation due to the pandemic.
The country’s second-largest IT services firm by revenue said it expects revenue growth of 19.5%-20% on a constant currency basis for the financial year to March, compared with the 16.5%-17.5% growth predicted in October.
“We expect the healthy technology spend to continue with large enterprises progressing on their digital transformations,” Chief Executive Officer Salil Parekh said in a statement.
India’s $194-billion IT industry has been a big beneficiary from the pandemic spurring global companies to bolster investments in services ranging from cloud-computing, digital payment infrastructure to cybersecurity.
Large deal signings for the third quarter were at $2.53 billion, a near 18% rise from the second, the company said.
Crosstown rival Wipro earlier on Wednesday reported a 30% rise in revenue for the December quarter and a near flat net profit, while the country’s largest IT services firm, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS.NS), is set to announce results later in the day.
Bengaluru-based Infosys said consolidated net profit climbed to 58.09 billion Indian rupees ($786.06 million), from 51.97 billion rupees a year earlier.
Revenue rose to 318.67 billion rupees, with the banking, financial services and insurance unit, which accounts for over a third of the total, posting a 16.85% growth in the quarter.
The company’s shares climbed over 50% in 2021, outperforming an about 31% jump for larger rival TCS.
($1 = 73.9000 Indian rupees)Reporting by Nallur Sethuraman in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila
This article was originally published by Reuters.