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Decline in global client spending may put Indian IT sector under stress

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Decline in global client spending may put Indian IT sector under stress
Though global IT services spending is likely to cross the $1-trillion mark to reach $1.031 trillion, growth rate will slow to 3.8% in 2019, compared to 6.7% last year according to reports
Debasis Mohapatra | Bengaluru Last Updated at July 11, 2019 02:21 IST



Expand credit to boost growth[/paste:font]
India's GDP to see slowest growth in Q3 FY19? Here's what economists say
Declining economic growth? Grim Q4 GDP numbers may greet new govt
GDP growth in Q3 slows to 6-quarter low of 6.6%
Why are Indian growth rates so volatile?

The Indian information technology (IT) industry may be in for a rough ride this year, as the overall IT services market is likely to face slowdown pangs, owing to lingering uncertainty on Brexit, apart from rising trade war tensions.

According to a report by global research firm Gartner, though global IT services spending is likely to cross the $1-trillion mark to reach $1.031 trillion, growth rate will slow to 3.8 per cent in 2019, compared to 6.7 per cent last year.


In its earlier report released a quarter ago, Gartner had projected a growth rate of 4.7 per cent in the IT services spending for 2019. Such downward revision in a span of three months reflects the fast-changing dynamics influencing demand in the industry.

“Although an economic downturn is not the likely scenario for either 2019 or 2020, the risk is currently high enough to warrant preparation and planning,” said John-David Lovelock, research vice-president at Gartner. “Technology general managers and product managers should plan out product mix and operational models that will optimally position product portfolios in a downturn (should one occur),” he added.



According to various estimates, of the $1-trillion IT services market, close to 30 per cent is outsourced. Of this outsourcing pie, Indian firms grab more than 60 per cent share, which translates to around $180-$200 billion worth of contracts.

In its earlier report released in October, Gartner had said that 46 per cent of organisations had indicated a consolidate IT services supplier as one of the effective measures of cost optimisation. Also, the rising trend of setting up global in-house centres in India was reflective of narrowing outsourcing opportunity for IT services players globally.

The first sign of softness in client spending is already evident, with the management commentary coming from IT majors such as Accenture and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS).


1562784348-9303.jpg


For instance, Accenture reported an outsourcing book-to-bill ratio of 0.96 in the quarter ended May, against 1.08 in the preceding quarter. The company, which follows a September-August financial year cycle, said demand softness in banking, financial services, insurance in Europe, apart from the manufacturing vertical, is responsible for this slowing book.


“Even as the demand environment is reasonable for offshore pure-plays (IT services firms), we expect rough edges to performance of companies with volatile financial services and uncertain manufacturing,” Kotak Institutional Equities said in a note. “Though broader demand is still reasonable, a slowing market is also a reality,” it added.

Apart from Accenture, even TCS’ growth figures carried some signs of the ongoing demand slowdown as the IT major surprised the market with less-than-expected rise in revenue with margin squeeze. “We see some stress in capital market segment and among European banks. (This financial year), we are looking to sustain growth more than acceleration,” Rajesh Gopinathan, chief executive officer and managing director at TCS, had said in a post-earnings conference.

On the overall IT spending comprising segments like data centre systems, enterprise software, IT services, communication services, and devices, Gartner said global spending is projected to grow 0.6 per cent to touch $3.74 trillion in 2019. However, this forecast low, compared to 5.1 per cent growth rate posted in 2018.

According to the global research firm, enterprise software is likely to grow at the highest rate of 9 per cent this year among all five segments. Apart from enterprise software and IT services, all other segments are likely to see degrowth, the report added.

https://www.business-standard.com/a...9-due-to-brexit-trade-war-119071001271_1.html
 
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they will reduce their rates and keep serving white master!

saarrrr how can i help you its your indians servant speaking our ancestors have served multiple master through out their histroy!
 
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India has done pretty well to market itself as a leading hub for IT management services. I deal with them everyday and they are mediocre at best. The worst IT company i have had to deal with it Wipro, you can easily tell that the so-called engineers have purchased their IT certs. The only reason the IT sector is surviving is because they are cheap.
 
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India has properly marketed their software.Almost all dubai businesses run on Tally Erp9 which is indian made accounting software and I think Pakistan is losing such share in market as we have not developed and promoted our indigenous software to foreign countries
 
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India has done pretty well to market itself as a leading hub for IT management services. I deal with them everyday and they are mediocre at best. The worst IT company i have had to deal with it Wipro, you can easily tell that the so-called engineers have purchased their IT certs. The only reason the IT sector is surviving is because they are cheap.
You shouldn't use Wipro's services going forward, try Pakistani firms, maybe you might find better quality.
 
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they will reduce their rates and keep serving white master!

saarrrr how can i help you its your indians servant speaking our ancestors have served multiple master through out their histroy!
Indian IT sector aggregates revenues of US$160 billion , with export revenue standing at US$99 billion and domestic revenue at US$48 billion, growing by over 13%. #Facepalm This attitude will only make your non-existent IT industry worse.
 
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You shouldn't use Wipro's services going forward, try Pakistani firms, maybe you might find better quality.
Apparently there are quite a lot of software Engineers in PDF who spend their time dealing with Indian engineers. And some of those soft Engineers do not even know how to write a basic java code.
 
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Indian IT sector aggregates revenues of US$160 billion , with export revenue standing at US$99 billion and domestic revenue at US$48 billion, growing by over 13%. #Facepalm This attitude will only make your non-existent IT industry worse.
indian It sector is mostly scall centers servant serving white masters and that too is declining until you guys just bow down and decrease prices and serve better and knowing your kind history i am sure ull be amazing servants!
 
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Decline in global client spending may put Indian IT sector under stress
Though global IT services spending is likely to cross the $1-trillion mark to reach $1.031 trillion, growth rate will slow to 3.8% in 2019, compared to 6.7% last year according to reports
Debasis Mohapatra | Bengaluru Last Updated at July 11, 2019 02:21 IST



Expand credit to boost growth[/paste:font]
India's GDP to see slowest growth in Q3 FY19? Here's what economists say
Declining economic growth? Grim Q4 GDP numbers may greet new govt
GDP growth in Q3 slows to 6-quarter low of 6.6%
Why are Indian growth rates so volatile?

The Indian information technology (IT) industry may be in for a rough ride this year, as the overall IT services market is likely to face slowdown pangs, owing to lingering uncertainty on Brexit, apart from rising trade war tensions.

According to a report by global research firm Gartner, though global IT services spending is likely to cross the $1-trillion mark to reach $1.031 trillion, growth rate will slow to 3.8 per cent in 2019, compared to 6.7 per cent last year.


In its earlier report released a quarter ago, Gartner had projected a growth rate of 4.7 per cent in the IT services spending for 2019. Such downward revision in a span of three months reflects the fast-changing dynamics influencing demand in the industry.

“Although an economic downturn is not the likely scenario for either 2019 or 2020, the risk is currently high enough to warrant preparation and planning,” said John-David Lovelock, research vice-president at Gartner. “Technology general managers and product managers should plan out product mix and operational models that will optimally position product portfolios in a downturn (should one occur),” he added.



According to various estimates, of the $1-trillion IT services market, close to 30 per cent is outsourced. Of this outsourcing pie, Indian firms grab more than 60 per cent share, which translates to around $180-$200 billion worth of contracts.

In its earlier report released in October, Gartner had said that 46 per cent of organisations had indicated a consolidate IT services supplier as one of the effective measures of cost optimisation. Also, the rising trend of setting up global in-house centres in India was reflective of narrowing outsourcing opportunity for IT services players globally.

The first sign of softness in client spending is already evident, with the management commentary coming from IT majors such as Accenture and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS).


1562784348-9303.jpg


For instance, Accenture reported an outsourcing book-to-bill ratio of 0.96 in the quarter ended May, against 1.08 in the preceding quarter. The company, which follows a September-August financial year cycle, said demand softness in banking, financial services, insurance in Europe, apart from the manufacturing vertical, is responsible for this slowing book.


“Even as the demand environment is reasonable for offshore pure-plays (IT services firms), we expect rough edges to performance of companies with volatile financial services and uncertain manufacturing,” Kotak Institutional Equities said in a note. “Though broader demand is still reasonable, a slowing market is also a reality,” it added.

Apart from Accenture, even TCS’ growth figures carried some signs of the ongoing demand slowdown as the IT major surprised the market with less-than-expected rise in revenue with margin squeeze. “We see some stress in capital market segment and among European banks. (This financial year), we are looking to sustain growth more than acceleration,” Rajesh Gopinathan, chief executive officer and managing director at TCS, had said in a post-earnings conference.

On the overall IT spending comprising segments like data centre systems, enterprise software, IT services, communication services, and devices, Gartner said global spending is projected to grow 0.6 per cent to touch $3.74 trillion in 2019. However, this forecast low, compared to 5.1 per cent growth rate posted in 2018.

According to the global research firm, enterprise software is likely to grow at the highest rate of 9 per cent this year among all five segments. Apart from enterprise software and IT services, all other segments are likely to see degrowth, the report added.

https://www.business-standard.com/a...9-due-to-brexit-trade-war-119071001271_1.html
Automation is a factor there are softwares that could easily debug/write complex codes, makes outsourcing to people useless. IT companies in India should look for new markets like China, Japan and ASEAN nations. Or change itself from being a back end to developer. There is potential.
 
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Automation is a factor there are softwares that could easily debug/write complex codes, makes outsourcing to people useless. IT companies in India should look for new markets like China, Japan and ASEAN nations. Or change itself from being a back end to developer. There is potential.
I think a revamp is needed in the education system which is actually being done right now to shift the skill towards newer technology. I am confident the IT Industry will adapt. We are having problems due to less Industry-Institution collabortion. I have seen this in my university. Hope HRD ministry has good plans for this.
 
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I think a revamp is needed in the education system which is actually being done right now to shift the skill towards newer technology. I am confident the IT Industry will adapt. We are having problems due to less Industry-Institution collabortion. I have seen this in my university. Hope HRD ministry has good plans for this.
Hopefully, but it is difficult for HRD to implement it, the federal system makes education curriculum matter of state affairs. Center can't push something the states won't buy lets see how it will go. So far the skill India plans didn't take off well in Schools. These are all cost burdened projects.
 
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awww didnit hurt?
NOPE
Btw Global economy is going through a slow down so its obvious that soon it will effect IT sector also and the best way to counter that slowdown is FTA in sevice sector with RCEP or Asean countries...
 
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Indian IT sector aggregates revenues of US$160 billion , with export revenue standing at US$99 billion and domestic revenue at US$48 billion, growing by over 13%. #Facepalm This attitude will only make your non-existent IT industry worse.
array Genius, Source is Indian, Author in Indian and he is saying because of world economy situation, there will be decline and IT sector will be under stress, find a way to tackle it before that time reaches.

Talking about Pakistan wont help you, itni mirchi.
 
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