14th January 2008

Infosys on acquisition spree

posted in Outsourcing News and Top Outsourcing deals |

Source: www.australianit.news.com.au

INDIAN technology titan Infosys Technologies is flush with cash and on the acquisition trail. But nailing down friendly deals is proving to be a tough task, according to its chief executive and managing director, S. Gopalakrishnan.

“(It’s) hard to get everything aligned and satisfied,” Mr Gopalakrishnan said in an interview. “There are companies out there - the only thing is they may not want to be acquired, or the valuation may be too high.”

Mr Gopalakrishnan’s comments came as Infosys reported a better-than-expected 25 per cent year-on-year increase in its fiscal-third-quarter net profit and increased its earnings forecast for the year ending March 31.

Infosys’s performance and forecast could help moderate fears that a likely slowdown in the US economy could hurt the company’s revenue and profit - and that of other big Indian tech outfits. Tech-industry analysts worry that a weaker global economy will increase pricing pressure on tech concerns, as US companies cut their technology budgets. The rupee, which has appreciated 12 per cent against the dollar since January 2007, also erodes the value of Infosys export revenue, which is mainly in dollars.

As India’s second-largest tech and outsourcing company by revenue after Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys’ earnings help set the tone for India’s tech sector. Infosys’s Bombay Stock Exchange-listed shares closed at 1,580.10 rupees ($45.31) Friday, down 1.4 per cent.

Infosys wants to buy businesses to beef up the array of services it can offer clients and to move up the value chain by doing higher-margin consulting work. It also wants to expand its geographical reach, particularly in continental Europe, reducing its dependence on dollar-based revenues and widening its client base.

There are only a small number of companies that fit Infosys’s wish list, Mr. Gopalakrishnan said. To cut the kind of deal Infosys wants, the target company needs to have annual revenue of $US50 million ($56.18 million) to $US300 million, and employ 1000 to a maximum of 2000 people.

Infosys isn’t interested in doing hostile deals, according to Mr Gopalakrishnan. Valuation must also be right. In some acquisitions, prices are being driven up by competition from other Indian firms, Mr Gopalakrishnan said. For example, India’s No. 3 tech and outsourcing company, Wipro, is also eager to grow in Europe and has bought businesses in Austria and Finland.

Infosys has about $US2 billion in cash or cash equivalents, which could be used for deals. “We have the money available for one, or two, or more, or a significantly larger acquisition, if need be,” Mr Gopalakrishnan said.

Infosys has no plans to take on debt to spend more on deals, he added.

Another Infosys option under consideration is buying businesses from its clients, as part of outsourcing deals. Last July, as part of a $US250 million outsourcing contract with electronics-manufacturing company Philips Electronics of Amsterdam, Infosys paid $US28 million to buy three service centres in India, Poland and Thailand from its client.

Infosys, which is also listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market, had third-quarter net sales of 42.71 billion rupees, up 17 per cent from 36.55 billion rupees a year earlier, helped by the addition of 47 new clients and improving prices.

Consolidated net profit for the three months ended December 31 rose to 12.31 billion rupees, up 25 per cent from 9.83 billion rupees a year earlier, driven by strong growth in outsourcing orders.

Infosys also raised its full-year revenue forecast slightly to between 166.3 billion rupees and 166.5 billion rupees, up from an earlier range of 165.9 billion rupees to 166.5 billion rupees.

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