NEW
DELHI: Indian IT firms Infosys, TCS, Wipro, Cognizant and Satyam
and telecom services company Bharti Tele-Ventures have stormed into
the Infotech 100 list of BusinessWeek magazine.
Infosys, which has been ranked number 10 among the global infotech
giants, won praises from the magazine for keeping its clients and
investors happy.
Tata Consultancy Services is ranked number 12, followed by Bharti
Tele-Ventures at No. 19, Wipro at No. 23, Cognizant Technology Solutions
at No. 32 and Satyam at No. 85," BusinessWeek said in its Infotech
100 list.
TCS was ranked among the 10 most profitable companies, seeing profits
of over $500 million. Cognizant was ranked among the 10 best companies
in shareholder return.
Interestingly, top global firms Accenture and IBM are ranked at
No. 31 and No. 44, respectively.
Commenting on Infosys, the magazine said 'thrilled investors' in
India value Infosys, which was well on its way to cross $2 billion
in revenue during this year, more than its rival TCS, which was
two-fifths bigger in revenues.
"Infosys' customers are happy too: 19 out of 20 customers
come back to this Bangalore-based firm with repeat orders. Now the
company is eyeing China. Of the 12,600 people it will hire this
year, about 1,000 will be at its Shanghai offices," the magazine
said.
On TCS, BusinessWeek said that the company took a big step in 2004,
referring to the company going public and raising $1.17 billion,
which was India's largest initial public offering.
However, a one-time $23.5 million charge on employee incentives
kept profit growth of the company to 27.5 percent, behind its peers
in a fast growing industry and leaving investors momentarily disappointed.
It also said TCS, the market leader, was looking for forward growth
in high value businesses such as technology consulting, software
embedded in electronic chips and Radio Frequency Identification
(RIFD).
"Excited about combining India's software skills and China's
electronic hardware prowess, TCS' CEO S Ramadorai is expanding rapidly
in Hangzhou," it said.
On Cognizant, the magazine said: "As more companies farm out
their business tasks to India, Cognizant keeps riding the outsourcing
wave." But it said Cognizant gave a twist to the formula which
in turn gave it an edge in the increasingly crowded field.
"Rather than setting up shop solely in India, Cognizant was
one of the outsourcers to focus on building a U.S. based management
team to develop closer relationship with customers. And about 87
percent of its sales come from customers in North America, most
of which are large corporations that want to cut their technology
costs like J P Morgan Chase and United Healthcare," it said.
"Now Cognizant is seeing growth from testing software code
and moving upstream into consulting," it added.
BusinessWeek said Bharti, in which New York buyout firm EM Warburg
Pincus has invested $300 million in 2001, has since grown to become
a 11.4 million subscriber-base telecom firm and whose stock have
grown five fold since its listing early in 2002.
"It's valuation is $10 billion and Warburg has made more than
$1 billion on the deal and still owns 5.8 percent. Bharti aims to
maintain 25 percent of the Indian cellular market, which is forecast
to reach 180 million customers in 2008," the magazine said.
Commenting on Wipro, the magazine said the company had branched
out from offerings such as software development, R&D and application
maintenance to providing remote infrastructure management, financial
services and applications and product testing. All that while maintaining
its position as the world's largest third party R&D provider.
"Wipro, which gets the majority of its revenue from the U.S.,
is pushing further in Europe and expects to make some acquisitions
this year," it added.
BusinessWeek said Satyam had finally managed to break the jinx
of being the No. 4 in the Indian software industry.
Satyam will hit the $1 billion revenue mark this year, thanks to
expansion into new areas such as infrastructure management and software
for engineering processes in the auto and defense industries, it
said.
"Satyam has more than $1 million contracts from its clients
and is wooing clients in Europe, Latin America and Northern Asia."
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