Back in July, I
questioned the upbeat outlookoffered by management of
Indian IT services outsourcer
Wipro (NYSE: WIT), especially considering the
then-cautious tone of competitors
Infosys (Nasdaq: INFY) and
Tata Consultancy . But based on Wipro's
recently announced quarterly results, it appears that my
concerns were unwarranted.
Revenue for the company's fiscal-2010 second quarter rose
6% year over year to $1.44 billion. Sequentially, the gain
was just shy of 10%. The IT Services business -- by far the
company's largest segment -- saw margins expand both
sequentially and annually. Combine those fine results with
double-digit operating margin expansion in Wipro's other
segments, and it's no surprise that net income shot up 21%
against the year-ago period, handily beating analyst
estimates.
Owing to a slightly higher share count, a 20% gain in
earnings per share was just shy of net income growth.
What powered these impressive results? Commenting on the
general environment, management cited "more stability in
volumes and pricing." From a bottom-line perspective,
increased client demand has likely led to better operating
leverage, as fixed costs decline as a percentage of revenue.
Of course, Wipro's not the only one benefiting as companies
spend their way to savings: Indian IT peer Infosys recently
reported better margins, and globetrotting behemoth
Accenture (NYSE: ACN) managed a
small EPS gainin its most recently completed quarter.
For Wipro, additional highlights include 37 new-client
wins, the most in seven quarters. The company inked a
five-year deal with integrated oil giant
BP (NYSE: BP), and it's set to provide
application management services for Nokia Siemens Networks, a
joint venture between
Nokia (NYSE: NOK) and
Siemens (NYSE: SI).
With consulting services representing only 2% of net
revenue, I'd say that Wipro is, for the moment, in the
industry sweet spot, since companies are most focused on
outsourcing routine operations. However, if corporate
managers do regain an appetite for larger, more sophisticated
projects, it will be interesting to see whether Wipro's
margin growth can keep pace with the more consulting-heavy
operations of Infosys, Accenture, and
IBM (NYSE: IBM).
Looking to the current quarter, management sees IT
Services revenue picking up to the $1.09 billion-$1.11
billion range, ahead of the $1.04 billion earned in the
second quarter.
In terms of valuation, Wipro's net income performance has
gone a long way toward justifying its 31.2 forward P/E. But
based on forward P/E and PEG ratios, the stock's still
expensive compared to competitors' shares. For a truly stark
comparison, consider that Wipro's fiscal 2009 price-to-free
cash flow ratio (P/FCF) is north of 50, versus a TTM P/FCF
ratio of 34.5 for Infosys and 11.2 for IBM. In other words,
Wipro's got a lot to prove.
Should future results come in below expectations, you
won't need a consultant to figure out why shares are
sinking.
Consult with further Foolishness:
This Is the Next Great Tech Market
Cisco Ain't Making Friends No More
4-Star Stocks Poised to Pop: Infosys
This article was originally published as
Wipro Wakes Upon
Fool.com
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