The quarter is expected to be steady but soft. Street estimates indicate revenue growth of about 8% year-on-year and profit growth of around 12%. On a sequential basis, brokerages are building in low single-digit constant currency growth of around 1-1.5%, suggesting that demand remains stable in parts but far from broad-based.
This will also be TCS’ first result after the AI-led selloff that hit IT stocks earlier this year. With the Nifty IT index under pressure, commentary from India’s largest software exporter could shape near-term sentiment for the entire sector.
Here are the six things investors should track.
Revenue growth
Analysts expect a modest quarter, with growth led mainly by developed markets. Estimates from brokerages suggest 1-1.5% quarter-on-quarter constant currency revenue growth. That means TCS is still growing, but not at a pace that would signal a strong demand revival.
FY27 guidance and demand outlook
This is likely to be the most important part of the result. Investors will want to know whether client budgets for calendar 2026 remain intact and whether macro uncertainty is hurting project decisions. Any hint of caution on FY27 could weigh on the stock more than the Q4 numbers themselves.
Deal wins and pipeline
Deal wins are expected to stay healthy, with estimates ranging from $7 billion to over $10 billion. The key will not just be the headline number, but whether management sounds confident on conversion of pipeline into revenue. In a cautious spending environment, strong deal wins do not always translate into immediate growth.
BFSI and sector commentary
BFSI is expected to remain the strongest vertical for TCS and will be closely tracked. Technology and telecom are also seen holding up. On the other hand, retail and auto are expected to stay weak. Investors will look for signs of whether demand weakness is deepening or stabilising across these verticals.
Margins
Most brokerages expect margins to remain largely stable, helped by rupee depreciation and operational efficiencies. But this benefit may be offset by AI investments, variable pay and reinvestment in growth areas. A margin beat could support the stock, but any pressure from cost build-up may raise fresh concerns.
AI, restructuring and BSNL
This is the bigger strategic bucket. TCS has been building its AI partnerships and infrastructure play, but investors want clarity on monetisation, pricing and whether AI is beginning to compress traditional services revenue. Commentary on employee restructuring costs, expected to be lower than the previous quarter, will also matter. So will any update on the BSNL deal, which has still not meaningfully started contributing.
Overall, TCS is not expected to deliver a dramatic quarter. But in the current environment, a stable print backed by reassuring commentary on growth, AI and deal execution may be enough to soothe investors. A cautious tone, however, could revive pressure on the sector.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of Economic Times)