Upside Gets Outsourced for Indian IT
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For several weeks last spring, it looked like India's information technology outsourcing giants were about to be swamped by the political tsunami that swept the left-leaning Congress Party into power. Fearing a reversal of long-standing pro-development policies, investors pulled billions of rupees out of the Bombay stock market, sending the widely watched BSE 100 index plunging more than 21%.
In response, U.S.-based investors pulled the plug on three of the largest so-called offshore outsourcers traded on Wall Street, knocking American depositary shares of Wipro(WIT Quote), Infosys Technologies(INFY Quote) and Satyam Computer(SAY Quote) down about 16%.
Six months later, the picture couldn't have changed more. The BSE has rebounded by 31%, and the outsourcers have soared far above their May 17 trough: Infosys by 94%, Wipro by 85% and Satyam by 66%.
| It Was a Very Good Half-Year Political realities have boosted Indian IT shares |
What brought about the run-up? Investors began to realize that the Congress Party, which actually initiated economic reforms in 1991, and its communist allies are very pro-development, as long as those policies don't hurt labor, said Rafiq Dossani of the Asia-Pacific Research Center at Stanford University. "They strongly support tax benefits and other incentives [for the outsourcers] because they increase employment. Likewise, they are in favor of multinationals investing in new companies that don't affect state-owned sectors such as airlines," he said.
Meanwhile, demand for offshore expertise has continued to rise, and increased productivity has easily offset a modest rise in wages. The result: big boosts to top- and bottom-line performance.
In the quarter ended in September, Infosys posted a 49% increase in profit, its largest quarterly jump in three years, and revenue was up 52% from a year earlier. Second-quarter earnings for Wipro were up 79% on sales that increased by 44%. And driven largely by increased business from General Electric(GE Quote), Satyam said its profit in the quarter was up 28% as revenue increased by 42%.
Although India has a huge educated work force, graduating about 800,000 engineers a year, there has been some upward pressure on wages as demand for labor increases. In the software industry, salaries have jumped by as much as 20% (less for call-center workers), said Stanford's Dossani. ...
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