Over 5 lakh employees, millions of
shareholders, Govt all have big stake in TCS, Infosys….
In their
earnings results for the quarter ended September , TCS and Infosys – India’s
top two software and service exporters in that order- have delivered numbers
which clearly point towards a stress in the IT sector , though it is still
considered safe on relative terms. In the market, their shares fall in the safe
category.
TCS has
earned net profits of Rs 6084.66 crore and Infosys R s 3398 crore.for the quarter. In their
own ways, their managements , headed by N Chandrasekaran and Vishal Sikka, among the most respected
industry leaders, have given their
version but in a way admitted that there have been or there are chances of
slippage because the pricing power is diminishing in the wake of difficult
markets in the US and elsewhere.
Both of them
get bulk of their revenue from the US, Europe and some part of it from China,
Japan. All these markets , excepting somewhat better situation in America are
battling consumer resistance, meltdown in manufacturing and processing sectors. That surely has a bearing on their IT spend.
By their
sheer size by Indian standards (by global standards, they are ‘ Bachas-kids),
we have a big stake in our top IT exporting firms. Betweeen two of them , TCS
and Infosys employ 5.23 lakh people, earn Rs 9482 crore …quarterly profits for
their millions of shareholders and pay over Rs ten thousand as quarterly tax to
the government.
That is why
, each time they have to declare their earnings, there are pre-result forecasts
and post-result analysis. Their Public Relations people do not run after news
persons for interviews. It is other way round. They filter the interview
requests and some time do “favours” to some of us by giving “exclusive “ interviews which are then
splashed in not one by half dozen newspapers and broadcast all the major market
channels. Anyhow, no complains. That is how it is !
Since the
stakes are so high, concerns remain high whenever there are signs of stress.
Thankfully, the leadership of these two firms realise that. I liked the way,
Chandrasekaran fielded the questions by
BS and made some admissions about the volume slowing down. In his HT interview,
he gave a very good quote which is what makes such companies tick. “ We want to
be the most agile startups”.
In many
ways, TCS does not behave like a typical Tata firm. It is really a global firm
in outlook, reading the challenges and coming up with the solutions. The TCS
CEO and MD made no bones about maintaining a distinct identity .
Pics courtesy: TCS, Infosys
No comments:
Post a Comment