



Mint Explainer | The few bright spots in an otherwise slowing IT services sector
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. The $285 billion IT services industry, employing 5.8 million people, continues to navigate an uncertain environment with multiple headwinds from AI to geopolitics. Yet, India remains central to delivering technology services at scale, even as entry-level tasks are increasingly automated.
Against this backdrop, the Q3 results offer a view of the pressures, priorities and pockets of growth for India’s IT services sector. Mint takes a look: The Q3 earnings indicate that pain points persist for IT services companies, which are now staring at a third consecutive year of glacial growth. Revenue growth has slowed, impacted by global macroeconomic headwinds, cautious client spending, and prolonged decision-making cycles.
Tariff-related headwinds in key sectors such as manufacturing, automotive, and retail are adding to the woes. Margins are under pressure due to rising costs and visa challenges, while discretionary IT projects continue to be deferred, as clients wait for policy and business environments to stabilize. Overall, the quarter signals that the $280 billion industry is not yet out of the woods.
Despite muted topline growth, certain segments offer a ray of hope. Cloud migration, cybersecurity and data analytics saw steady demand, driven by enterprises modernising their digital infrastructure. A few large deal wins were a bright spot amid uncertainty.
For Infosys, the total contract value in Q3 increased to $4.85 billion from $3.1 billion in Q2. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) Q3 order book, at $9.3 billion, was strong despite a marginal decline from $10 billion in Q2. Sectors such as healthcare, BFSI and manufacturing showed selective traction, particularly in digital transformation
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