India's Top 5 IT Firms Face Slow FY27 Growth: 2-5% Expected

Key Takeaways

- TCS posted its first-ever annual revenue decline since going public in FY26, down 2.4% in constant currency
- AI automation is causing 2-3% revenue compression as clients demand lower prices for less labor-intensive work
- Despite revenue headwinds, operating margins remain stable at 13-25%, with TCS hitting a four-year high
A Second Consecutive Year of Tepid Growth
India's largest IT services companies are staring down another year of sluggish revenue growth. TCS, Infosys, HCLTech, Wipro, and Tech Mahindra are expected to post 2-5% revenue gains in FY27, according to estimates from consulting firms Zinnov and UnearthInsight, along with domestic brokerages.
This follows a rough FY26. TCS recorded a 2.4% revenue decline in constant currency terms. That's the company's first annual revenue drop since going public. Wipro fared worse, posting its third consecutive year of declining revenue, down 1.6% in FY26.
Infosys and HCLTech managed modest gains of 3.1% and 3.9% respectively. But both companies widened their FY27 guidance ranges, signaling uncertainty ahead. Infosys now expects 1.5-3.5% growth, down from its FY26 guidance of 3-3.5%. HCLTech projects 1-4% growth, explicitly accounting for 2-3% AI-led revenue compression. Tech Mahindra barely moved, posting 0.6% growth.
“It is important to be paranoid and not become complacent. That is the way we manage what's going on in the industry.”
— Salil Parekh, CEO at Infosys
Three Forces Squeezing Revenue
The slowdown isn't coming from one direction. Three distinct pressures are converging on India's IT giants.
- AI-led price compression: Generative AI tools are reducing the need for large junior-level coding teams. Clients are demanding lower prices as automation replaces billable human hours. HCLTech explicitly built 2-3% AI deflation into its FY27 guidance.
- Geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainty: High interest rates in the US and Europe have frozen client budgets for discretionary digital projects. UnearthInsight anticipates a broad-based pullback in transformation spending.
- The GCC boom: Global capability centers are pulling work in-house. Major enterprises are building their own offshore teams rather than contracting with IT services firms.
Yugal Joshi, partner at US-based consultancy Everest Group, summed up the challenge. The firms have invested in AI partnerships and internal automation. But the revenue compression from AI price pressure and vendor consolidation isn't being offset by new business expansion.
“The traditional three-decade-old business model of India's IT industry is obsolete due to the rise of AI.”
— C. Vijayakumar, CEO at HCLTech
Margins Tell a Different Story
Here's the silver lining. Despite revenue pressure, operating margins remain healthy. The top five IT companies reported full-year operating margins between 13% and 25%. TCS hit its highest margin in four years.
How? Cost discipline, automation, and benefit-sharing agreements with clients. Gaurav Parab, principal research analyst at NelsonHall, called this a genuine positive. Without these measures, the companies couldn't have maintained their margin levels while revenues stagnated.
Logicity's Take
What Analysts Are Watching
Motilal Oswal estimates Infosys will grow 2.5% organically in FY27, hitting the midpoint of its 1.5-3.5% guidance. For TCS, the brokerage projects 3.8-7% annual revenue growth over FY26-FY28, but notes the increase will come from select pockets rather than broad-based recovery.
Wipro CEO Srinivas Pallia has acknowledged the cautious environment. Clients are taking a measured approach on transformational projects. The company's focus remains on returning to profitable growth.
Analysts are also watching for monetization of AI services. The firms have partnered with AI vendors and deployed automation internally. The test is whether they can package AI capabilities into new revenue streams that offset traditional service deflation.
The Bigger Picture: A $315 Billion Sector in Transition
Nasscom projects India's tech sector will hit $315 billion in total revenue by the end of FY26. But growth within that number is shifting. The traditional labor-arbitrage model that built these companies over three decades is under pressure.
The shift is visible in how companies talk about their workforce. The conversation has moved from headcount growth to revenue-per-employee metrics. AI isn't just a client offering. It's reshaping internal operations and forcing a rethink of what these companies sell.
For FY27, expect continued cost management, capability expansion in AI and cloud services, and cautious guidance updates as tariff situations and global economic conditions evolve.
Understanding AI coding capabilities helps explain why IT services firms face automation pressure
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is TCS revenue declining for the first time?
TCS posted a 2.4% revenue decline in constant currency for FY26 due to reduced discretionary spending by clients, AI-led price compression, and the growth of global capability centers that bring IT work in-house.
How is AI affecting Indian IT company revenues?
AI automation is causing 2-3% revenue compression as clients demand lower prices. Generative AI reduces the need for large junior coding teams, allowing clients to negotiate reduced rates for less labor-intensive work.
Are Indian IT companies still profitable despite slow growth?
Yes. Operating margins remain healthy at 13-25% across the top five firms. TCS hit its highest margin in four years. Companies have maintained profitability through cost discipline and internal automation.
What is the GCC boom and why does it hurt IT services firms?
Global capability centers are offshore offices that enterprises build themselves instead of contracting with IT services providers. This trend pulls work away from TCS, Infosys, and others as clients develop in-house capabilities.
What growth can investors expect from Indian IT stocks in FY27?
Analysts estimate 2-5% revenue growth for the Big Five. Infosys guides 1.5-3.5%, HCLTech guides 1-4%, and Motilal Oswal projects TCS at 3.8-7% over FY26-FY28 from selective rather than broad-based recovery.
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Source: Tech-Economic Times / ET
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
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