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Technology News Updated Jul 4, 2026

Indian IT Firms Face Muted Q1 Growth Amid AI Spending and Global Uncertainty

Indian IT companies are expected to report subdued Q1 earnings growth due to client-specific issues, weak verticals, and geopolitical uncertainty. Enterprises are redirecting tech budgets toward AI initiatives and Global Capability Centres, keeping addressable tech spending softer year-on-year. Large IT firms may see constant currency revenue growth of -1.8% to 1.1%, while mid-tier firms like Persistent Systems and Mphasis are likely to outperform. Profitability remains under pressure due to wage revisions, AI investments, and currency headwinds, though improved valuations offer some relief.

Indian IT firms likely to report muted Q1 growth amid AI spending, macro uncertainty

New Delhi, July 4

India's Information Technology companies are expected to report another quarter of subdued earnings growth despite seasonal strength, due to client-specific issues, weakness in select verticals and geopolitical uncertainty. Addressable tech spending in Indian IT companies is expected to remain softer year-on-year as enterprises redirect technology budgets towards artificial intelligence initiatives and Global Capability Centres, according to a report by Systematix Research.

The report indicates that the outlook for the sector would remain challenging over the next few years, with tier-one IT companies expected to deliver annual revenue growth in the range of -1 per cent to 5 per cent, constrained by AI-led pricing pressure, weak discretionary demand and macroeconomic uncertainty.

"IT services companies are expected to report another quarter of muted growth despite seasonal strength," the report said, adding that net profit growth is also expected to follow muted revenue growth due to protection strategies against currency fluctuations at some companies.

Among major IT firms, Infosys is expected to raise the lower end of its FY27 revenue growth guidance to 2.5-3.5 per cent, including acquisition-related contributions, while HCL Technologies is likely to maintain its existing guidance. Wipro is expected to guide for -1.5 per cent to 0.5 per cent constant currency revenue growth for the second quarter of FY27.

The report expects large IT companies to post constant currency revenue growth ranging between -1.8 per cent and 1.1 per cent quarter-on-quarter in the June quarter, while mid-tier firms are likely to outperform, led by Persistent Systems and Mphasis. Deal wins, however, are expected to remain broadly stable.

Profitability is also expected to remain under pressure. Systematix estimates margins for large IT companies could contract by 10 to 100 basis points, quarter-on-quarter due to wage revisions, weak operating leverage, investments in AI capabilities, restructuring costs, higher amortisation expenses and cross-currency headwinds. The brokerage also said it does not expect any meaningful currency tailwinds during the quarter.

Despite the weak near-term outlook, the report noted that the sharp correction in IT stocks has improved valuations. The Nifty IT index has declined around 31 per cent over the past year, bringing valuation multiples to historically attractive levels, while companies continue to generate healthy cash flows and maintain strong payout ratios.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

It's a worrying sign for freshers looking for jobs in IT. With muted growth and AI eating into entry-level work, the next few years could be tough for new graduates. But hey, it's also a wake-up call to upskill.

Arjun K

The Nifty IT index dip makes valuations attractive, but macro uncertainty and AI spending are long-term headwinds. It's a good time to be cautious—investors might look at selective mid-caps rather than large-caps for now.

Nisha Z

Indian IT needs to stop relying on cost arbitrage and start innovating on product and AI solutions. The next decade will separate the real players from the rest. Let's see who steps up.

Deepak U

Margin pressure due to wage hikes and AI investments is a real concern. Companies need to balance employee growth with profitability—otherwise, we might see more restructuring like the past year.

Varun X

Muted growth but stable deal wins and healthy cash flows show the sector isn't in freefall. It's more of a reset. Those with patience can find good entry points in the stock market now. 😊

Sneha F

As a long-time employee in IT, I feel the pinch. The focus on AI is good, but we can't ignore that

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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