Indian IT firms to see revenue decelerate by 5%: S&P Global Ratings
Macroeconomic (macro) concerns, along with a cautious approach towards discretionary information technology (IT) spending, will see the revenue for Indian IT firms decelerate by 5 per cent through 2024-25 (FY25), from the highs of 12-18 per cent in 2022-23, said analysts from S&P Global Ratings.
“The reason behind this slow growth is a macro slowdown. Customers are cutting their discretionary IT spending, especially on projects that take longer to deliver quantifiable outcomes. We also acknowledge that there are still strong economic headwinds for the next few years,” said Spencer Ng, associate director, corporate ratings, S&P Global Ratings, over a call in a media briefing.
S&P Global Ratings believes there is still significant uncertainty about how these markets will perform.
“Projects that achieve cost-efficiency, vendor consolidation, Cloud migration, along with long-term partnerships with customers, will bring the much-needed stability among players,” said Ng.
“When it comes to the top four Indian IT players, of which we rate three, before 2015 they enjoyed tremendous growth because they were capturing market share improving their capabilities. After 2015, their growth tends to be more aligned with Accenture,” he added.
S&P Global Ratings rates the three top IT services players: Infosys, HCLTech, Wipro.
The rating firm also believes that newer technologies such as generative artificial intelligence (AI) ChatGPT will see increased investment from Indian IT players, rather than getting threatened, they will work closely with clients use these technologies to solve problems.
On margins, which have been an important factor for the sector, S&P expects margins to flatten in 2023-24 (FY24) improve by 1-1.5 per cent in FY25.
“Indian IT companies face slower growth than they previously anticipated may struggle in FY24 to improve their utilisation rate of employees. Price negotiations with customers transferring costs will also be increasingly difficult,” observed Ng.