Questioning, doubt, heated assertions that betray a sudden erasure of confidence바카라the cream of corporate India seems to be going through a phase of intense self-reflection. And there바카라s a pattern: criticism emanating from elders and peers at a time of generational change. All of that in a context of global flux. Four months ago, it was the cut and thrust for control at the Tata Group, where a promoter questioned the competence of a professionally appointed chairman. Now, Infosys바카라a talismanic name in Indian infotech, its second largest software and services exporter바카라is going through similar pangs.
At the heart of the controversy is a kind of performance audit conducted in the open, in full view of everyone. Promoters led by N.R. Narayana Murthy have publicly called into question the wisdom of several decisions taken by the present management and board. Specifically under the lens are two symptomatic issues: a lavish severance package given to two employees who left Infosys recently; and the slightly-more-than-lavish compensation package of $11 million per annum for CEO Vishal Sikka. (That바카라s Rs 73 crore-plus.)
The Infosys management is fighting to establish its discretionary turf: deciding the CEO바카라s compensation or severance packages is a clear prerogative of the management, it says, and it바카라s done in line with employment agreements. It justifies the huge increase in Sikka바카라s remuneration package in the name of competitive and difficult times and steep targets that lie ahead of the 1981-founded company. But the over 40 per cent spike in the CEO바카라s compensation from this January has not gone down well with the promoters. They feel it was not justified, especially in the light of Infy바카라s performance under him바카라and his stint has now spanned two-and-a-half years, long enough for an appraisal of how the worm has moved on the graph.
But first, all that may be profitably read against a wider context. The tussle between Sikka and the founders comes at a tough juncture for the $150-155 billion Indian IT services industry. For a company that has been a bellwether entity for long, the times are ripe for some hard introspection. Infosys, like the rest of the industry, is facing a decline in new deals from clients in the West, the US in particular. On top of that, the industry is gearing up for changes in work visa rules in the US, Indian IT바카라s largest market, something that has the potential to cause a real dent in industry numbers.
In recent quarters, business has not been very good and IT growth rates have dipped to single digits, with the weather forecast showing mostly endless cloudy skies. Infosys has found no way to immunise itself from this general trend. The last few quarters have been rough. In fact, revenue saw a negative growth of 0.2 per cent in the last quarter. And the uphill trek required to restore status quo ante looks arduous and slippery. In October 2016, Infosys cut its annual revenue growth target for the second time in three months as India바카라s software service exporters felt the pressures from major clients holding back on spending.


(From left) Nandan Nilekani, N.S. Raghavan, Kris Gopalakrishnan, N.R. Narayana Murthy, S.D. Shibulal and K. Dinesh
No surprise, then, that CEO Sikka바카라s New Year message to employees fairly bristled with cautionary truisms. 바카라The mountains ahead are tall바카라, 바카라there is a long way to go바카라, 바카라the road ahead is long and not easy바카라바카라gloomy motivational metaphors tumbled out one after the other. To his people바카라whose collective moniker, Infoscions, recalls grander days바카라he warned against a 바카라lackadaisical바카라 attitude towards greater value creation and stressed on the importance of automation, something he has been driving after taking over the reins. It would not suffice, he said, to 바카라just mechanically execute the job we are handed바카라. That last line could just as well have been a self-directed one. It바카라s an open question whether the concerns raised by Narayanamurthy are limited to the payouts바카라or, by implication, stand as a general pointer towards the company바카라s performance in recent times, especially Sikka바카라s performance as a CEO.
To be fair to Sikka, in the time he has steered Infosys, its revenues have increased from $8.2 billion to about $10 billion. Simultaneously, attrition바카라one of the banes of the software sector and especially a concern area for Infosys바카라has come down from a high of 23.4 per cent to 14.1 per cent. 바카라In the last two-and-a-half years, we have laid out an ambitious strategy to transform ourselves to being an automation-based company. Revenue growth has caught up with industry-level performance,바카라 Sikka said at an investor call earlier this week. He specifically mentioned 바카라automation, innovation and new services바카라 as factors that have helped the company hold its margins.
There바카라s more on the credit side. In Sikka바카라s tenure, Infosys added five new $100-million clients to its kitty and its top 10 new products and platforms바카라Mana, Skava, Edge, Panaya, Cloud services, Cloud Migration, Mainframe Modernisation, API economy, BI Renewal and Cyber Security바카라now produce over $110 million in quarterly revenue. This was around $22 million in Q2 of FY15. According to Sikka, $100 million accounts increased from 12 (when he took over) to 18 now바카라and $200 million accounts too doubled from three to six. And all this in a challenging environment. Says business historian Raman Mahadevan: 바카라Sikka바카라s leadership is different as compared to Narayanamurthy바카라s because the whole scenario has changed. The market is much more competitive and requires a different approach. His is suited to the times.바카라
Some more positive data. Infosys estimates show that revenues under Sikka grew from Rs 50,133 crore (in FY14) to Rs 53,319 crore (FY15) and further to Rs 62,441 crore (FY16). And net profit grew from Rs 10,648 crore in FY14 to Rs 12,329 crore in FY15바카라this 15 per cent rise slowed to a more modest 9 per cent as FY16 clocked Rs 13,491 crore. The total headcount in the company increased from 1,60,405 in FY14 to 1,94,044 in FY16, a near-21 per cent rise, even as attrition dipped.
However, a closer look at quarterly results paints a different picture of Sikka바카라s leadership. During his tenure, the net profit figure for Q2 바카라15 was Rs 3,096 crore바카라and this grew to Rs 3,708 crore in Q3 바카라17. However, in that December 2016 quarter, net profit grew by a mere 2.8 per cent and revenue actually dipped by 0.2 per cent. In fact, read at that degree of magnification, the 10 quarters Infosys has spent under Sikka바카라s leadership have been marked by low revenue and net profit growth.
Three of those 10 quarters have clocked negative net profit growth, and two quarters have also seen negative growth in revenues. Barring the double-digit figure of Q2 바카라16, when net profit grew by 12.1 per cent, there has been no high growth in net profits, with growth mostly in single digits. The story with revenue growth is similar바카라no double-digit growth in revenue in his entire term so far. Q2 바카라16 saw the peak at 8.9 per cent.
To put that in perspective, Sikka바카라s figures compare poorly with even the performance of former CEO S.D. Shibulal, whose stint (2011-14) is considered one of the worst in Infosys history. During Shibulal바카라s term, which spanned a comparable 33 months from Q2 바카라12 to Q1 바카라15, both revenue and net profit saw good growth바카라from Rs 8,099 crore to Rs 12,770 crore, and Rs 1,906 crore to Rs 2,886 crore respectively바카라despite the term as a totality seeing four negative quarters for net profit and three for revenue. Even Kris Gopalakrishnan바카라s term (2007-11) as CEO saw revenues grow from Rs 3,773 crore (in Q1 바카라08) to Rs 7,485 crore (Q1 바카라12). And neither of the two original legends, Murthy and Nandan Nilekani, saw a single quarter of negative revenue growth during their terms as CEO.
Does that make Sikka the worst performer as Infy CEO so far? Well, maybe Murthy (1981-2002) and Nilekani (2002-07) may have been at the helm in vastly different times and Sikka is struggling against a global context that his illustrious predecessors did not have to face in those nascent/boom years where growth figures have to be read against the low base. And yet, Sikka바카라s performance does not sit very brightly at all against even that of one of his peers in the sector바카라N. Chandrasekaran of TCS, India바카라s largest software company.
Chandrasekaran바카라s performance was exemplary to say the least. Under him, TCS바카라s revenues jumped threefold, from $6.34 billion in 2010 to $16.5 billion in 2015-16. Its profits too rose threefold바카라from Rs 7,000 crore to over Rs 24,000 crore in the same period바카라and exports alone touched $10 billion. As on January 5, 2017, TCS under Chandrasekaran had a market capitalisation of $67.69 billion. Against this, Infosys had a market cap of $33.96 billion on February 15, 2017.
Of course, these are early days for Sikka and much could change if he gets a long innings. He has followed a transitional strategy, adjusting to circumstances and reorienting Infosys towards more competitive times. He has altered the organisational structure and work culture with new initiatives like design thinking, knowledge-based IT and a platforms approach. Besides the focus on growing its core business, Sikka has said he would also sharp-focus on consulting, an area of disappointment till now. Artificial intelligence too is a big part of his vision 2020.
The piquant part is that his chosen path to redemption is itself a difficult one. Sikka바카라s strategy of 바카라New and Renew바카라 raises the bar for Infosys. It has set a target of achieving revenues of $20 billion by 2020 at 30 per cent net margin and revenue per employee of $80,000. A stupendous task, considering the current turnover is around $10 billion. If Sikka바카라s vision is to be achieved, that will have to double in the next three years. That too, in a tough and much more competitive environment.
Add to that the problems the Trump administration is creating for companies that are beneficiaries of outsourced jobs. Almost 62 per cent of Infosys바카라s business comes from the US. With the curbs on outsourcing the American president is imposing, Sikka may as well say goodbye to any chance of robust growth from that market. Also, with curbs on sending workers overseas, he will be forced to hire locally in the US. This will be more expensive than Indian workers and will cut into margins, ultimately reflecting in its balance sheet.
Investors, though, are keeping the faith바카라they seem sanguine that Sikka바카라s strategy will pull Infy through the tough times. Oppenheimer Developing Markets Fund, which holds a 2.13 per cent stake in Infosys, has reportedly said Sikka has improved the company바카라s operating performance and is generally on the right strategic path.
On closer inspection, the CEO바카라s New Year message was more than a bunch of generalities바카라it was a call to action in tough times, getting employees and investors braced up for the ride. At the wheel, Sikka still has a lot to prove, to his investors, to his employees바카라and yes, to his promoters. For now, the board and the promoters have acceded to the massive increase in his pay package. But Sikka has to finally show a commensurate spike in bottomlines. Or else, he will go down in the books as one who validated the sceptics.
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N.R. Narayana Murthy
* CEO 1981-2002
- Double-Digit Revenue growth 5 Qtrs
- Negative Revenue growth 0 Qtr
- Double-Digit Net Profit growth 4 Qtrs
- Negative Net Profit growth 0 Qtr
Nandan Nilekani
CEO for 21 Qtrs
- Double-Digit Revenue growth 7 Qtrs
- Negative Revenue growth 0 QtrDouble-Digit
- Net Profit growth 10 Qtrs
- Negative Net Profit growth 2 Qtrs
Kris Gopalakrishnan
CEO for 17 Quarters
- Double-Digit Revenue growth 2 Qtrs
- Negative Revenue growth 2 Qtrs
- Double-Digit Net Profit growth 3 Qtrs
- Negative Net Profit growth 5 Qtrs
S.D. Shibulal
CEO for 12 Quarters
- Double-Digit Revenue growth 2 Qtrs
- Negative Revenue growth 3 Qtrs
- Double-Digit Net Profit growth 3 Qtrs
- Negative Net Profit growth 4 Qtrs
Vishal Sikka
CEO for the last 10 Quarters
- Double-Digit Revenue growth 0 Qtr
- Negative Revenue growth 2 Qtrs
- Double-Digit Net Profit growth 1 Qtr
- Negative Net Profit growth 3 Qtrs
* Results are from 1999-2002, earlier data not available
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Infosys Shareholding Pattern
- Total shares held 2,29,69,44,66
- Shares held by Public 1,99,28,45,531 (86.76%)
- Shares held by Promoter & Promoter Group 29,28,06,199 (12.75%)
- Shares held by Employee Trust 1,12,92,934 (0.49%)
- Non Promoter-Non Public 1,12,92,934 (0.49%)
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Infosys Financials In Sikka바카라s Tenure
Revenues in Rs crores
- 2014 50,133
- 2015 53,319
- 2016 62,441
Net Profit Rs crores
- 2014 10,648
- 2015 12,329
- 2016 13,491
Head Count
- 2014 1,60,405
- 2015 1,76,187
- 2016 1,94,044