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With
US$ 40 billion in revenue, the Indian information
technology sector continues to be one of the sunshine
sectors of the Indian economy.
The information Technology sector is growing despite the
fact that the rupee has shown considerable
appreciation.The software and services industry continue
to be the dominating factor in the overall growth of the
Indian industry. In 2005-06, the Indian software and
services industry exports witnessed a healthy growth,
its total exports reaching Rs. 104,100 crore (US$ 23.6
billion), an increase of 33 per cent in dollar terms and
30 per cent in rupee terms over the previous financial
year. This segment will continue to show a robust growth
and the total value of software and services export is
estimated at Rs. 141,800 crore (US$ 31.3 billion) in
2006-07, an increase of 36 per cent in rupee terms and
over 32 per cent in dollar terms. The Business Process
Outsourcing (ITES-BPO) sector has emerged as a key
driver of growth for the Indian software and services
Industry. As export revenues from ITES-BPO estimated to
grew from US $ 6.3 billion in year 2005-06 to
US $ 8.3 billion in year 2006-07, a year-on-year growth
of over 31 per cent was achieved. Consumer electronics
sector is estimated to achieve a production level of Rs.
20,000 crore during 2006-07, as compared to Rs. 18,000
crore in the year 2005-06, thus achieving a growth over
11 per cent. The fast growing segments during the year
were colour TV, DVD players, home theatre systems. The
colour TV production has shoot up to over 12 million
units during the year 2006-07. The flat segment CTVs now
accounts for more than 50% of the total domestic TV
production. The PC sales are expected cross 6.5 million
units during the year 2006-07. The high growth in PC
sales was attributed to increased consumption by
Industry verticals such as Telecom, Banking and
Financial Services, Manufacturing, Education, Retail and
BPO/IT-enabled services as well as major
e-Governance initiatives of the Central and State
Governments.
Even
in the event of a falling dollar and a strengthened
rupee, India is the undisputed leader in offshore
services, accounting for 65-70 per cent of the global
offshoring pie. It tops the list of 30 countries on
criteria such as language, Government support, labour
pool, infrastructure, educational system, cost,
political and economic environment, cultural
compatibility, global and legal maturity, and data and
intellectual property security and privacy, says Gartner.
In
2006-07, software and services exports grew by 33 per
cent to register a revenue of US$ 31.4 billion, whereas
the domestic segment grew by 23 per cent to US$ 8.2
billion. Within exports, IT services touched US$ 18
billion, a growth of 35.5 per cent. The country’s IT
exports have, in fact, come quite far, starting from a
few million dollars in the early 90s. The Government
expects the exports turnover to touch US$ 80 billion by
2011, growing at an annual rate of 30 pc per annum.
Apart
from being a great offshoring destination, India offers
a market with very high returns. Evidently,
multinationals are investing aggressively in their India
units. For instance, IBM has the biggest staff in India.
According to industry estimates, the turnovers of firms
such as Dell, Intel, Microsoft and IBM are way beyond
the half-billion dollar mark. Cisco is believed to have
crossed the billion-dollar mark in domestic sales in
2006-07, and HP India is said to have an India turnover
of around US$ 2.5 billion.
•
IBM India has entered a US$ 600 billion,
five-year deal with Vodafone Essar. It is also working
with Bharti Enterprises and Idea, and other Indian
corporates. With its revenues from these deals crossing
the US$ 2-billion mark, the company plans to invest US$
6 billion in India over the next three years.
•
Microsoft India, which is the only subsidiary
outside the US where Microsoft has an end-to-end
presence through six business units, now reports
directly to the company’s headquarters in Redmond.
With an estimated turnover of over US$ 763 million, the
company has reworked its pricing strategy and is
localising its offerings. Its Windows operating system
(OS) - XP and now Vista - still has over 90 per cent
market share and is a leading player in the server OS
segment, too.
•
Like IBM, the US$ 57-billion Dell has its largest
employee base (13,000) outside of the US in India. In Q3
of FY 2008, the company posted a 47 per cent growth in
revenues in India. In comparison, its China chapter
registered growth of 22 per cent. Its India turnover
stands at around US$ 600 million.
•
Cisco, which has already committed US$ 1.1
billion to India, will be launching a huge brand
re-positioning campaign in the first quarter of CY2008.
It has already sold over 200,000 IP phones over the last
few years.
•
Intel India is banking on the mobility boom
(laptops, mobiles), gaming, SMEs, e-governance,
education initiatives and low-cost computing initiatives
in India. It is also banking on its WiMax forays in the
country.
IT
spending in India is set to grow the fastest in the
world in 2008, says global research firm IDC.
•
The server market in India grew by 30 per cent
year-on-year to reach US$ 169 million in factory
revenues during the second quarter of 2007, according to
IDC Asia/Pacific Quarterly Enterprise Server Tracker, Q2
2007.
•
The overall client PC market in India grew 22.1
per cent, recording 1.53 million shipments in Q2 2007
calendar year as against 1.25 million in the
corresponding period last calendar year, IDC said.
Desktop PC shipments showed a growth of 11.3 per cent
while notebook PCs spurted by 73.1 per cent during the
same period (April-June) this year.
Moving
beyond software, India is now emerging as a hi-tech
manufacturing hub. The Department of Information
Technology (DIT) has received investment proposals worth
over US$ 25 billion from 17 Indian and multinational
companies.
Investments
worth over US$ 6 billion have already been committed
while another
US$ 20 billion are in the pipeline. These include
India’s first LCD panel unit by Videocon at an
investment of US$ 1.8 billion and two other proposals
for solar cells and photovoltaic cells by Moser Baer and
Titan Energy Systems of US$ 3.2 billion and US$ 1.2
billion, respectively.
The
proposals come in the wake of the semiconductor policy,
under which the Centre plans to give financial sops to
companies planning fab units. At least 2-3 units are
eligible for incentives under the fab category and about
8-10 under the eco-system section.
The
M&A space in the IT sector has been fairly busy. In
November 2007 alone, there were 13 domestic deals and
one cross border deal. Six private equity (PE) deals
with an investment value of US$ 44 million were inked in
one month alone.
Around
58 merger and acquisition (M&A) deals were conducted
in November at a value of US$ 940 million, as against 51
deals amounting to US$ 610 million in October 2007,
according to a report by Grant Thornton, an accountant
and business advisory firm.
The
total number of M&A deals during the first 11 months
of 2007 now stands at 638, with an announced value of
US$ 50.79 billion.
During
2007, the industry saw global players focussing on
building up their delivery capacities in India so as to
remain competitive with the larger Indian players. Large
Indian companies were also looking to build and
strengthen domain and technology capabilities even as
they were spreading the services delivery
infrastructure.
Finally,
the mid-size companies focussed on getting scales on a
few chosen domains and technology capabilities. Experts
feel that the IT industry can offset the impact of a
stronger rupee in the short term by improving
productivity, currency hedging, adjusting the
onshore/off shore ratio and migrating to an appropriate
global service delivery model and negotiating new
contracts in rupee terms.
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