Off-Prem

Channel

India's big four services giants bemoan rising labor costs

Business is good at TCS, Wipro, Infosys and HCL – but margin pressure and staff attrition are big problems


India's big four outsourcers are worried about rising labor costs and their impact on profits, according to their most recent quarterly financial statements.

TCS, Wipro, Infosys and HCL have all filed quarterly results in recent days, and all reported healthy finances – but they've also warned of future challenges.

Infosys chief financial officer Nilanjan Roy offered a typical analysis of the situation by stating: "We are fueling the strong growth momentum with strategic investments in talent through hiring and competitive compensation revisions."

"While this will impact margins in the immediate term, it is expected to reduce attrition levels and position us well for future growth. We continue to optimize various cost levers to drive efficiency in operations."

Infosys reported the highest attrition rate of the four: 28.4 percent over the last twelve months. That figure is yet to trend downward since workers felt it safe to seek new gigs as COVID-19 restrictions eased.

Wipro's operating margins were lower than anticipated, at 15 percent. CEO Thierry Delaport said he believes [PDF] margins have "bottomed out."

Chief financial officer Jatin Dala said the most important component for improving the company's margin is the "pyramid and fresher improvement."

"We have hired in FY'22 more than double of freshers that we hired in FY'21 and in FY'23, we will hire another more than double, which means that our ability to correct the pyramid through consistent improvement of the base and moving people up through the pyramid would be a big structural lever,” he said. "In fact, that is the only lever which can reduce the cost pressure that we have seen in last 18 months."

CEO Thiery Delaporte said talent investments were paying off, but cautioned the company will delay quarterly promotion cycles and salary increases. He added that staff attrition rates continue to fall, and are currently at 23 percent over the last twelve months.

HCL's attrition rate was just 23.8 percent. CEO C Vijakumar said the company did not moderate any hiring based on demand. "Over the last few quarters, we've been hiring both lateral talent and fresh talent and we think we have some additional capacity and that was the reason net hiring was lower than what we had in the past," according to [PDF] Vijakumar.

The company kept its margin guidance at 18–20 percent, but warned that investors should expect the lower end of the guidance to materialize. "Margins in services was under pressure mainly due to increase in talent cost and transition cost," said chief financial officer Prateek Aggarwal.

Meanwhile, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) chief financial officer Samir Seksaria argued "It has been a challenging quarter from a cost management perspective. Our Q1 operating margin of 23.1 percent reflects the impact of our annual salary increase, the elevated cost of managing the talent churn and gradually normalizing travel expenses. However, our longer-term cost structures and relative competitiveness remain unchanged, and position us well to continue on our profitable growth trajectory."

Infosys had $4.4 billion in revenue – a 17.5 percent reported year-on-year growth. Wipro reported gross revenue at $2.7 billion, up 17.9 percent year-on-year. HCL noted $3 billion in revenue, up 11.2 percent year-on-year. And TCS reported overall revenues at $6.78 billion dollars, representing year-on-year growth of 10.2 percent. ®

Send us news
24 Comments

Cognizant alleges Infosys swiped its trade secrets

Sueball suggests outsourcer went out of bounds by developing competing product

Infosys CEO promises jobs to 2,000 graduate recruits it has kept on hold for two years

But they have to show up for unpaid training, or lose their jobs-in-waiting

India delays planned space station and moon base by five years

As results from 2023's Chandrayaan-3 mission suggest south pole Moon magma

India misses ten million public WiFi hotspot goal, catchup not looking likely

Plus: Glowing reports for Fukushima wastewater; New datacenters in Fiji, Malaysia & South Korea; and more

Walmart clears out its shares of Chinese e-tailer JD.com

That’s one way to mark the end of an eight-year partnership

Indian telcos to cut off scammy, spammy, telemarketers for two whole years

There's a blockchain involved so it's totally going to stop you getting those calls

India shuffles away draft law treating influencers like real broadcasters

Online celebs might find that flattering – but not if it means a committee must approve their next livestream

Infosys denies it owes $4B in taxes to India

Taxman disagrees with the outfit that built the tax portal

'Digital arrest' scams are big in India and may be spreading

Bad guys claim they're cops, keep you on hold for hours until you pay to make loved ones' crimes go away

India migrates 25,000 small lenders to ERP in just five months

Plus: Food poisoning hits ByteDance Singapore; Indonesia bans DuckDuckGo; and more

India contemplates compulsory dynamic 2FA for digital payments

SMS OTPs are overused, so bring on the tokens and biometrics

UK and India sign broad tech collaboration pact

Pick a hot market – AI, quantum, chips, 6G – and the pair have a plan to work on it together