Jayesh Sanghrajka
Analyst · Ankur Rudra from JPMorgan
Thank you, Salil. Good morning, good evening, everyone, and thank you for joining the call today. We have been able to successfully navigate a quarter of global uncertainty, which is reflected in our holistic business performance. We delivered market-leading sequential growth, robust large deal wins with strong net new, resilient operating margins, high single-digit EPS growth and another quarter of free cash flow to net profit of over 100%. Let me cover the key aspects of the results. Growth was strong and broad-based. Revenue up 2.6% sequentially, including 0.4% from acquisitions and 3.8% on a year-on-year in constant currency terms. Sequential revenue growth was achieved despite a significant reduction in third-party costs by 60 basis points to 7.3% of revenue. Sequential growth was once again driven by increase in realization, thanks to progress in the Project Maximus. Volume growth, while muted, was positive. Manufacturing grew in double digits and FS and EURS grew above 5% year-on-year in constant currency terms. Amongst geographies, North America grew ahead of the company at 2.9% sequentially in PC. On a year-on-year basis, Europe grew 12.3%, which is over 3x the company average. Operating margins were at 20.8%, down 20 basis points Q-o-Q and 30 basis points year-on-year. Sequential margin resilience was despite absorbing balanced comp hike, higher variable pay and investment in sales and marketing. Utilization, including trainees, went up 30 basis points Q-o-Q at 85.2% and including trainees up 80 basis points to 82.7%. EPS in rupee terms grew by 8.6% and in dollar terms grew by 5.8% Y-o-Y. Our relentless focus on cash continues and is reflected in free cash flows of INR 884 million, which is 109% of net profit. This is the fifth consecutive quarter of free cash flows being over 100% of net profit. We expect FY '26 free cash flows to be above 100% of net profit. Consolidated cash and cash equivalents stood at INR 5.27 billion at the end of the quarter after paying out final dividend for FY '25. Yield on cash balance was 7.2% in Q1. ROE improved by 140 basis points to 30.4% due to dividend payouts. Large deal wins were robust, comprising of 28 deals with a TCV of $3.8 billion, including 55% net new. This includes multiple vendor consolidation deals with a combined TCV of over $1 billion, including a mega deal with one of the largest global banks. This reflects our deep- rooted client relationships and differentiated delivery capabilities. Vertical-wise, we signed 9 deals in communications, 6 in EURS, 5 in manufacturing, 4 in financial services, 2 each in high-tech and retail. Region-wise, we signed 20 deals in Americas, 6 in Europe and 2 in ROW. Headcount at the end of the quarter was 323,788. Attrition increased marginally to 14.4%. Operating margin for Q1 was at 20.8%, a decline of 20 basis points sequentially. The major components of sequential margin change for the quarter are as follows: headwinds of 100 basis points from compensation increase, higher variable pay, partly offset by other salary-related items. 30 basis points from currency movement and 20 basis points from sales investment, partly offset by tailwinds of 70 basis points from increase in realization due to Maximus and seasonality, 40 basis points on account of lower amortization costs on intangibles and 20 basis points from lower third-party costs, leading to 20 basis point drop in operating margin sequentially. ETR for the quarter was at 28.9%. The effective ETR rate for the financial year '26 to be in the range of 29% to 30%. While Q1 was steady, business environment remains uncertain due to lack of resolution on tariffs and geopolitical situation. Clients continue to be cautious in their discretionary spending, decisions reflecting in delayed decision-making. Near-term visibility remains good, and we expect stronger H1 compared to H2 on account of normal seasonality, as highlighted earlier. Coming to verticals. Financial Services saw a good momentum this quarter in U.S. with capital markets, commercial banking and wealth management seeing a lot of transformation opportunities. Agentic AI is playing a pivotal role with focus on areas like KYC onboarding and portfolio management. We are now the preferred AI partner for 10 of the top 20 clients in FS with many initiatives scaling from POC to production, especially in Agentic AI. We are partnering with GCCs both in setup and growth-led deals. While pipeline is strong with new opportunities in vendor consolidation, cost optimization and simplification, clients are cautious about decision-making due to volatile environment. Manufacturing segment continues to face challenges in automotive, industrial and Europe with decision-making delays and soft discretionary spend. While clients are reevaluating their supply chains due to tariff uncertainty, we are helping them leverage technology across end-to-end life cycle from design to manufacturing to sales. Pipeline remains healthy with focus on cost takeout and opportunities. We won a large deal in this vertical in Q1 to help a client set up a GCC. In auto, we are helping clients in rationalizing their footprints and in industrial, we are helping them in cost optimization. EURS vertical outlook remains mixed due to economic uncertainties. Pipeline for both large and mega deals remain strong. Our investment in industry cloud energy transition and AI-driven operational efficiency are driving growth and differentiating us in large deals. In energy, high cost pressures due to oil price volatility are prompting clients to consolidate vendors for savings. In utilities, advancement in renewable energy, smart grid technology and sustainability regulations are reshaping the market. In services, clients remain cautious about spending across CapEx and OpEx. In retail, uncertainty around tariffs has led to muted spending in large geographies, supply chain impact and procurement disruption. Budgets remain tight and decision cycles elongated. There is a slowdown amongst clients on discretionary spend through -- though our pipeline is strong. We are seeing strong commitment from clients to engage us as trusted partners for AI-first outsourcing and transformation deals in both IT and BPM services. Enhanced interest in AI is resulting in budget reallocation with discretionary spend expected to be self-funded through AI-led productivity benefits. Deals in the sector continue to leverage Topaz and AI Next platform capabilities. Communications is facing growth challenges and increased OpEx measures amidst volatile macroeconomic and political landscape. Clients are focusing on cost takeout and vendor consolidation. There is strong focus on AI and customization to monetize 5G use cases. So ROI concerns are delaying newer investments. OEMs are aiming to profitable growth and are exploring all levers, including tighter and reduced IT budgets and leveraging AI and automation. Growth for us is led by ramp-ups of previously won large deals. Clients in Hi-Tech remains cautious due to macro headwinds and geopolitical tensions leading to cost pressures and budget cuts. Discretionary programs are paused because of significant investments in GenAI, GPU and AI. Driven by our Q1 performance and our current assessments of rest of the year, we have revised our FY '26 revenue guidance to 1% to 3% in constant currency terms. This continues to assume a reduction in third-party revenues versus FY '25 based on existing deals and new deals in the pipeline. Our operating margin guidance for the year is 20% to 22%. We will continue to keep a close watch on economic environment and its impact on client budgets and reassess our guidance as we progress during the year. With that, we can open the floor for questions.