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India’s Wipro sheds over $650 million in market value on weak forecast

India’s Wipro sheds over $650 million in market value on weak forecast

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Wipro is displayed inside its premises in Bengaluru, India, August 13, 2025. REUTERS/Priyanshu Singh/File Photo

17 Apr 2026 11:54AM (Updated: 17 Apr 2026 07:12PM)

April 17 : Shares of Wipro fell 3 per cent on Friday, wiping out $670 million in market capitalisation a day after a tepid first-quarter revenue forecast reinforced fears of slowing growth and relentless margin pressure at India's fourth-largest IT firm.

The selloff marked the stock's steepest one-day drop in nearly a month, making it the worst performer on the IT index, which ended marginally lower.

Wipro said it expects June‑quarter revenue to range from a 2 per cent sequential decline to flat growth, citing muted demand as its U.S. banking and financial clients curb spending in an uncertain economic environment.

The forecast followed a lacklustre fourth-quarter, in which the company missed analysts' expectations for both profit and revenue.

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The weak outlook overshadowed any optimism following its record share buyback plans, with Wipro's U.S.-listed shares declining nearly 5 per cent overnight.

Dolat Capital analysts said the forecast underscores persistent organic growth challenges, while Ambit Capital noted revenue weakness is becoming entrenched, with fiscal 2027 potentially marking the fourth straight year of decline - setting it apart from its top peers in the IT sector.

Margin pressures are also likely to persist, Emkay Global Financial Services said, citing the impact of salary hikes, integration of low-margin acquisitions and competitively priced large deals.

Wipro reported deal wins of $3.5 billion in the January-March quarter, up from a six‑quarter low of $3.33 billion in the previous three months, but still below the $4 billion recorded a year earlier.

However, Ambit said strong deal bookings are yet to translate into revenue, with a rising share of large, long‑tenure contracts delaying conversion and weighing on near‑term growth.

The stock has shed over 22 per cent so far this year, making it the worst performer on the IT index amid concerns of AI-led disruption and demand uncertainties.

The index is down 16 per cent year-to-date, compared with the Nifty 50's 6.8 per cent drop.

Source: Reuters
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