Quite simply because of the revised revenue guidance for 2014 from growth of at least 16.5% to at least 14%. This is a huge cut of ~$220m (from ~$10.3bn to ~$10.08bn), all of which coming in H2. This forecasts:
CEO D’Souza highlights two main factors contributing to the reduced guidance:
Of these, the largest relates to client-specific issues at a handful of clients. The implications in the earnings call were that these were temporary issues but in at least one case (including a U.K. retail sector client), we believe Cognizant has lost business to an Indian competitor.
On a positive note, Cognizant has been selected for three major outsourcing contracts with a TCV of $3.5bn that it expects will bring in incremental revenue of $200m in 2015. And the new business is all long-term outsourcing ... whereas, if we are correct in our understanding, the business that Cognizant is losing is primarily ADM type activity. These new contracts will help accelerate Cognizant’s revenue mix from being still very dependent on traditional custom applications development projects and application maintenance engagements (activities which we believe have been growing for Cognizant at lower than the company average for some time) to having a greater mix of what the company terms “Horizon Two” (BPO, IT infrastructure management) services, where it was arguably somewhat late in building scale. Similarly, Cognizant was relatively late in investing in Continental Europe, but is now reaping some benefits from its CI Group business unit acquisitions. One of the three new large signings is Vorwerk, a European consumer goods firm.
By far the most important signing in Q3 will be that with Health Net, not just because of its size (at $2.7bn over seven years, the largest in Cognizant’s history), nor because of the breadth of services being provided (BPO plus applications outsourcing and IT infrastructure management), but because it appears that the intention is for Cognizant to leverage the software IP and the delivery capabilities it will acquire with the deal to set up a BPO utility for other U.S. health payors. This would indeed be transformational for Cognizant - and for the sector.
The third large deal, with an unnamed financial services client, illustrates Cognizant expanding an existing relationship to include both BPO and ITO. Again, now that it has scale in some areas of BPO some areas if industry-specific financial services BPO, F&A) and in IT infrastructure management services, Cognizant is much better positioned to secure complex multi-service outsourcing deals than it was a few years ago.
Cognizant claims its revenues from SMAC services are around $500m per annum: if so, then its Horizon 3 businesses are also gaining traction.
So, the short term loss of revenue is obviously a major setback that will continue to be a headwind in 2015, but recent investments and new wins position Cognizant well to resume stronger topline growth in the mid-term. It certainly claims its pipeline is healthy. We may also see further inorganic growth in Continental Europe.
Finally, Cognizant is contending with offshore attrition by offering a wage hike (10%) that is at the higher end of the industry, a tactic that works well in India.
]]>This is the third quarter of improved topline growth. Management has raised revenue guidance for full FY 2014 to growth of 11.5-12% (up from prior guidance of 9-10%, and double the level of growth achieved in FY 2013). This would mean Infosys is getting back to Indian IT services market growth rates (NASSCOM predicted 12-14% for FY 2014).
So where has the growth come from this quarter? It is the last quarter of acquisitive growth from Lodestone (acquired Oct 2012) contributing 41% of the y/y growth (55% last quarter). Infosys’ traditional areas of ADM (which underperformed for much of FY 2013) contributed a healthy 28% of the overall growth. This indicates the effectiveness of the recent drive at Infosys to go back to basics; its BITS businesses overall contributed 55% of the overall growth this quarter. Management commentary on client budgets emphasized their ongoing focus on initiatives cost optimization, is where Infosys BITS service lines play.
In terms of service lines, BFS and Manufacturing continue to be the growth engines. But Telecoms continues to be a major drag (down an estimated 9.6% y/y): it has declined from contributing 12.9% of revenue in FY 2011 to 7.9% this quarter.
The revised FY 2014 revenue guidance implies anticipated y/y growth in Q4 of between 8 and 9.9%, thus H2 overall will deliver slower growth than was achieved in H1. Accenture also saw a slowdown in its quarter ended November 30: the indications from these two bellwethers are of slower revenue growth in Q4 CY 2013: we shall know more next week when more results are published.
The operating margin of 25.0% is up 322 bps sequentially (up 150 bps excluding the one-time visa provision last quarter). Infosys has been stripping out costs by offshoring both billable (where relevant, depending on service type) and non-billable roles (notably in marketing: sales & marketing expense is 5.0% of revenue, down from 5.8% last quarter, with management referring to increased investment in sales). Narayanan Murthy commented on ensuring that “all jobs that can be done in lower cost locations are done in lower cost locations”. Increased pricing also contribute to the sequential margin improvement. Nevertheless, this is the sixth consecutive quarter when operating margin is down y/y.
Another factor contributing to the sequential improvement in margin is the 1.1% q/q decline in headcount (the last time this happened was four and a half years ago, in the June 2009 quarter), or 1,823 employees.
Infosys has been looking to get utilization up to its 78% to 82% target range, but it has again declined sequentially to 76.9% (from 77.5% last quarter).
Attrition continues to increase, to 18.1%; this may be part of the drive to weed out underperformers, but is also possibly indicates a trend in employee morale, in spite of the wage hikes from July 2013. There has been a string of departures of senior execs in the last six months (since the return of N.R. Narayana Murthy) and this is likely to have caused some short-term disruption.
As part of a reshuffle at the top, B. G. Srinivas and Pravin Rao have been appointed as Presidents, with B. G. Srinivas focusing on global markets and Pravin Rao focusing on global delivery and service innovation, on top of their existing portfolios. These are clearly the two front runners for the next CEO after S D Shibulal retires in May next year, unless Infosys elects to go for an external hire. One indication of the level of rethinking that is going on at Infosys is that just a couple of months ago it significantly expanded its Executive Council. That same Council is being disbanded from April 1 with the two new Presidents being given responsibility to put in place “appropriate governance sectors for their respective areas”. Historically, Infosys was a company where any major changes tended to focus on its long-term vision and were planned in detail beforehand; today it appears to be focusing on shorter term imperatives.
Infosys continues to enjoy a very strong balance sheet, ending the quarter with $4,236m in cash, up from $4,130m in the prior quarter.
Looking ahead, management shared its outlook for FY 2015 client IT spending; the tone was cautious, referring to “a mixed bag” across segments.
So what should we expect from Infosys in FY 2015? The company is clearly making progress on getting back to basics with its BITS offerings and it continues to enjoy the boost from the Lodestone operation; next quarter will indicate whether Lodestone is helping drive organic growth in its consulting business. It is still too early to tell whether the newer PPS offerings, on which Infosys places so much store, will pick up steam this year and begin to approach, even outstrip overall company growth. PPS businesses currently contribute 5.3% of company revenue, down from 7.1% back in FY 2012. PPS is key to Infosys' long-term vision, but two years on it is hardly a success story. Indian media is speculating on setting up a separate subsidiary for PPS; we would expect to see some inorganic growth in the next year. Meanwhile, there are several new key roles still to be appointed including a global Head of Sales. Infosys is looking in a better shape now than it was three quarters ago but it going through an unsettling period.
NelsonHall will be publishing an updated comprehensive Key Vendor Assessment of Infosys within the next few days. For details, contact [email protected]
]]>Pindar has become the third CEO of a major U.K. outsourcing company to resign this year. The other two, Nick Buckles of G4S and Chris Hyman of Serco, both left behind companies that are being investigated for fraud by the British Government. No such allegations have been directed at Capita.
The company has done extremely well under the leadership of Pindar. In the past ten years alone:
Pindar leaves the company in good shape, with:
Today's announcement coincides with the news that Capita has resolved the problem of its under-performing personal insurance BPO businesses. It is selling Lancaster Insurance Services, Sureterm Direct, BDML Connect and Delta Underwriting to Markerstudy Group for an undisclosed price. The four businesses (685 personnel based across three locations) are expected to generate ~£47m in revenue and make a combined operating loss of £15m in 2013. Capita is also closing its SIP administration business based in Salisbury.
]]>Zurich is a key insurance sector client for Accenture, for a range of consulting and application services; for example in 2010 it was awarded a ten-year, $50m contract to build and maintain a core insurance system and provide underwriting, policy administration and claims management support for Zurich’s P&C business in LATAM. Accenture did not win several back-office BPO contracts at Zurich; for example it lost a major procurement contract against Procurian – a competitor which it is now in the process of acquiring – and lost in an F&A BPO award against Capgemini (initial contract was renewed for five years in Q3 2012).
So why is Accenture announcing this 2012 contract with Zurich now? The emphasis in today’s press release is the extent to which Accenture is involved in and knowledgeable of Zurich’s finance IT processes through its work in this initiative to help Zurich better align its finance IT function to support its business objectives and reduce costs. There are some clear benefits of having one service provider for finance AM and for F&A BPO. Is this a statement of intent by Accenture that it remains interested in also providing some F&A processing as well?
(NelsonHall recently published an updated comprehensive Key Vendor Assessment on Accenture, available to subscribers of the KVA Program)
]]>There are some clear positives in Wipro’s performance this quarter:
The Americas (essentially the U.S.) continue to be the weakest region at Wipro in terms of overall topline growth. Elsewhere, Wipro continues to see double digit growth in APAC and other emerging markets, which together crossed the $200m revenue mark this quarter and accounted (by NelsonHall’s estimate) for ~35% of the overall y/y revenue growth, with EMEA accounting for another 40%.
In terms of service line, Technology Infrastructure Services and Business Application Services continue to be the growth engines for Wipro, although the rate of growth in the former is slowing slightly. Encouragingly, two weak areas, ADM and R&D services (the latter exposed to softness in the telecoms market) are showing signs of stabilization.
The revenue guidance for next quarter indicates we should expect to see similar, or slightly stronger growth next quarter.
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