India IT firms Q1 net seen up, growth prospects cloudy
(Repeats story ahead of result)
* What: Fiscal Q1 results from India's top software exporters
* When: From Friday, July 10
* Tata Consultancy, Infosys, Wipro net seen up 2-12 pct
* Focus on outsourcing business outlook, pricing trends
BANGALORE, July 8 (Reuters) - India's top software services companies are likely to report a rise in quarterly profits, but worries persist about the near-term outlook for the export-driven sector as technology spending falls and clients seek fee cuts.
Analysts said a reduced pace of deal cancellations and signs of stability in the financial sector, a key customer base, was positive for India's $60 billion outsourcing sector, but a pick-up in growth was unlikely due to fragile global economy.
"The IT sector is not out of the woods yet. Pressure on the financials will continue for some time as demand outlook is not great," R.K. Gupta, managing director at Taurus Asset Management, said. "Margins will remain under pressure."
Infosys Technologies (INFY.BO)(INFY.O), India's No. 2 IT services firm which is seen as a trend setter for the sector, will be first to off the blocks with its fiscal first-quarter results on Friday, followed by leader Tata Consultancy Services (TCS.BO) and third-ranked Wipro (WIPR.BO)(WIT.N).
Investors will be watching management comments on any change in demand, the pricing environment and staff levels, after hopes of growth revival later this fiscal year sent outsourcers' stocks soaring up to 44 percent in the June quarter.
Powered by an army of low-cost, English-speaking workers, the outsourcing sector provide services ranging from managing complex computer networks and call centres to software coding and maintaining technology operations of global corporations.
The sector's scorching pace of growth has halted as many top customers are struggling to stay afloat, have gone bankrupt, or are tackling severe cost cuts, leaving little room to boost technology spending.
Research firm Gartner expects global IT spending to fall 6 percent in 2009, sharper than an earlier forecast of 3.8 percent, due to the economic downturn. [nBOM14518] "Visibility for fiscal year 2010, as of now, remains hazy and any global economic improvements are likely to take time to reflect in fundamentals," Harit Shah, a sector analyst with Angel Broking, wrote in a report.
"We expect pricing to witness a downward trend, as has been the case over the past several quarters now." Continued...

