Infosys seeks revival with more tech investments, staff

Employees walk in front of a pyramid-shaped building at the Infosys campus in the Electronic City area of Bangalore September 4, 2012. REUTERS/Vivek Prakash/Files

By Lehar Maan and Soham Chatterjee BANGALORE (Reuters) - India's second largest IT services provider Infosys Ltd said on Friday it would boost investment in cloud computing, smartphone apps and other new technologies to win more high-margin outsourcing contracts. The move towards these more lucrative deals heralds a change in focus by Infosys, once a trendsetter in India's $100 billion IT outsourcing industry but which has struggled in recent years to retain staff and market share. Analysts say new technology is the next big requirement for global corporations. Infosys currently derives the bulk of its revenue from low-margin and highly competitive businesses like application development and maintenance and IT infrastructure management services. "Change is inevitable," Outgoing Chief Executive Officer and co-founder S.D. Shibulal told reporters after Infosys posted a higher-than-expected quarterly net profit growth of 21.6 percent. Newly appointed CEO Vishal Sikka, a former senior executive at German software company SAP AG who combines both business and tech savvy, is expected to drive the strategy change in Infosys. Sikka will also have to stem a staff exodus, which hit record-high levels in the quarter to June 30 as well as revive Infosys' innovative edge that, some investors, said was blunted by the outgoing, conservative management. In a sign of the times, Infosys said it won a deal in the June quarter from a leading insurance company to develop a smartphone app that allows parents to set up a driving pact with their teenagers. Infosys, which lost its position as India's most widely held stock to mortgage lender Housing Development Finance this year, was up 1 percent at 0308 ET at 3,325 rupees, while the Mumbai market index was down 0.9 percent. STAFF EXODUS Shibulal, the last of Infosys' seven founders to hold the role of CEO and who is leaving at the end of this month, said the company had already taken several measures to retain staff, including quarterly promotions. "Attrition is a matter of concern to us, it is definitely higher than our comfort range," he told reporters. Chief Financial Officer Rajiv Bansal said he expected staff exits to moderate to around 15 percent in the next few quarters, after the annualized staff attrition rate touched a record 19.5 percent in the June quarter. Infosys, which had cash and cash equivalents worth nearly $4.2 billion at end-June, maintained its revenue growth forecast for the year to March 2015 at 7-9 percent, as analysts expected, with the company expecting to win some large deals this year. Consolidated net profit for the quarter ended June 30 rose to 28.86 billion rupees ($480.20 million) from 23.74 billion rupees in the same year-ago period, and exceeding the 26.72 billion rupee average of analyst estimates, according to Thomson Reuters data. Revenue in the quarter rose 13.3 percent to 127.70 billion rupees, as Infosys added 61 new clients taking the tally to 910 at the end of June. Its customers include BT Group Plc, Bank of America and Volkswagen AG. ($1 = 60.1000 Indian rupees) (Writing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee and Miral Fahmy)