Infosys Q3 FY24 Earnings Call - Strong AI-Driven Deal Momentum and Upgraded Revenue Guidance
Summary
Infosys reported a modest 0.6% sequential revenue growth and 1.7% year-on-year increase in constant currency, powered by a robust $4.8 billion large deal pipeline, with 57% representing net new clients. The landmark $1.6 billion deal with the UK National Health Service highlights Infosys' expanding healthcare AI capabilities. The company is deeply embedding AI across its client projects, executing 4,600 AI initiatives and generating 28 million lines of AI-assisted code, signaling a strategic shift toward AI-led value pools. This momentum underpins an upward revision of revenue growth guidance to 3%-3.5% for FY24, while maintaining operating margins between 20%-22%. Despite industry-wide challenges, Infosys is increasing headcount and investing in sales and marketing, reflecting confidence in demand and a long-term AI-driven transformation opportunity. Margins show resilience after absorbing labor code changes and investments. Management remains cautious but optimistic on discretionary spending, particularly in financial services and energy sectors, and continues to explore M&A opportunities to deepen AI capabilities.
Key Takeaways
- Infosys posted 0.6% sequential and 1.7% year-on-year revenue growth in constant currency for Q3 FY24.
- Large deal wins reached $4.8 billion this quarter with 57% net new business, including a $1.6 billion NHS healthcare AI deal in the UK.
- Adjusted operating margin expanded slightly to 21.2% despite labor code cost impacts and investments in sales and marketing.
- Free cash flow generation was strong at $915 million for the quarter.
- Infosys is aggressively scaling AI adoption, working with 90% of its top 200 clients on 4,600 AI projects and generating over 28 million lines of AI-generated code.
- Six AI-led value pools have been identified: AI engineering services, data for AI, operational agents, AI software development and modernization, AI in physical devices, and AI trust and risk services.
- Headcount increased by 13,000 in two quarters, driven by hiring 18,000 freshers this year as part of capacity building, contrasting with peers making cuts.
- Revenue growth guidance for FY24 was upgraded to 3%-3.5%, while operating margin guidance remains between 20%-22%.
- Pricing models are evolving with AI, including outcome-based and agent-specific pricing, though specifics remain in early stages.
- Infosys is pursuing acquisitions to bolster AI, cyber, consulting, and energy services capabilities but not aggressively chasing AI services startups yet.
- Financial services and energy sectors show improved discretionary spending and deal flow, while retail remains cautious but recovering.
- Infosys maintains a flexible hybrid work model and does not plan immediate changes to office policies.
- The impact of new Indian labor codes has been largely accounted for in financials, with ongoing effects expected to be modest (~15 basis points annually).
- No current plans to increase H-1B visa applications; majority of US workforce does not require visas, and Infosys manages delivery with onshore and offshore teams.
- Management confirms no Infosys employee has been apprehended by US authorities amid H-1B scrutiny but one employee was denied entry earlier and returned to India.
- Infosys is focused on building specialized AI software engineering talent with competitive compensation structures to meet evolving client needs.
Full Transcript
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: A very good evening, everyone, and wishing you all a very happy New Year. Thank you for joining us today. My name is Rishi, and on behalf of Infosys, I’d like to welcome all of you. As always, since this is the New Year, my rules don’t really change. One question from each media house. We’ll try our best. But with that, let me invite our Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Salil Parekh, for his opening remarks. Over to you, Salil.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: Thanks, Rishi. It’s good to see that you’re very consistent, and I’m sure the media team is as well. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for being here. Warm wishes for the New Year to all of you. We’ve had a strong performance in Q3. Our revenue grew 0.6% sequentially and 1.7% year-on-year in constant currency terms. Our large deals were at $4.8 billion, with 57% net new. This was across 26 deals. Our adjusted operating margin was 21.2%. We generated free cash flow of $915 million. One of the most significant large deals we won was with the National Health Service in the U.K. This $1.6 billion deal expands our work in the health care sector. We will help NHS leverage AI to streamline operations and improve patient care for U.K. citizens. We have deepened our Topaz AI capability with an agent services suite called Topaz Fabric.
This suite helps our clients manage and implement AI agents across the enterprise. We had strong momentum in AI adoption across our client base. Today, we work with 90% of our largest 200 clients to unlock value with AI. We’re currently working on 4,600 AI projects. Our teams have generated over 28 million lines of code using AI. We’ve built over 500 agents. We’re scaling our forward-deployed engineer team. We are now witnessing six AI-led value pools emerging that could unlock a large incremental opportunity. We also see productivity-led benefits that compress some legacy areas. The six large AI-led value pools are AI engineering services, data for AI, agents for operations, AI software development and legacy modernization, AI deployed in physical devices, and AI trust and risk services.
We believe we are uniquely positioned to capture market share across these value pools and emerge as the leading AI value creator for global enterprises. We will share a comprehensive view of our approach at an Investor Day later this quarter. With a strong performance in this quarter, we have revised our revenue growth guidance for the financial year. The new revenue growth guidance for this financial year is 3%-3.5% growth in constant currency. Our operating margin guidance for the financial year remains the same at 20%-22%. With that, let’s open it up for questions.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Thank you, Salil. We will now open the floor for questions. Joining Salil is Mr. Jayesh Sanghrajka, Chief Financial Officer, Infosys. The first question is from Ritu Singh from CNBC-TV18.
Hi, thank you. And Rishi, sorry, this is our only chance to speak with the management every quarter, so we’ll have to exceed that one question limit. With that, Salil and Jayesh, to begin with, I wanted to start with your headcount number. We’ve seen an increase of 13 to 46 over just the last two quarters. And this is interesting because it’s coming at a time when your peer, TCS, is cutting 30,000 jobs. How should we read into this? I mean, is this a real indicator of how you see the demand environment improving? And with that, I wanted to get to your guidance figure being raised to 3%-3.5%. How much of that upgrade is because of large deals like NHS being factored in? How much of the Versant acquisition, which is yet to be completed, as we understand, is baked into that number?
And because last quarter, you were telling us, for instance, there are segments like retail that remain the weakest link. So where are you seeing improvement that has led you to upgrade your guidance? That’s one. Also, sequentially, we’ve seen a very light bit of a marginal dip in your margins, that is to 20.8%. This is at a time when there are tailwinds emerging from the rupee appreciation. So if you could break down why that has been the case and while you continue to tell us about how you’re uniquely placed to exploit that AI opportunity. And the likes of HCLTech and TCS have been giving us concrete numbers. Why does Infosys refrain from doing so? Thank you.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: So let me start, I think, on margin. Jayesh might have some points. I think the first part I missed a little bit. It was the headcount increase, right?
Yeah.
Yeah. So on the headcount increase, I think it demonstrates that we have confidence in where the market is, what we are seeing in terms of the demand. And that also feeds in, in a way, to the second point you had in terms of how are we raising the guidance, the growth guidance. So first, in terms of the growth guidance, we are just finishing the third quarter, so only one quarter is left. So we have had a lot of large deals in the previous few quarters. Plus, we had a very strong execution in this quarter. We have also seen, you asked a little bit about the industries. We’ve seen, for example, in financial services, and we’ve seen in energy, utilities, resources, services.
We see that the way the deals have come, the way we have become AI partner of choice with our largest clients, we see a good outlook even as we look into the next financial year. And that’s in part helped us to increase the guidance, which is only for this financial year, which is for ending in March at the end. On margin, you want to?
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Yeah. So first of all, very happy New Year to all of you. Before I come to margin, I just wanted to also touch upon the headcount part. If you recollect, last year, we had called out that we are going to hire 20,000 freshers this year, right? And we have onboarded roughly around 18,000 freshers. And we are well on our way to finish our 20,000 number for this year, which in a way reflects in our headcount also because many of them are under training. And if you look at our utilization, including trainees, has come down. So that is our investment into building capacity for future, in a way, right? So that’s on the headcount. If you look at margins, we have expanded our margins this quarter by 20 basis points versus the last quarter.
We are now on a nine-month basis at 21% margin, which is midpoint of the guidance that we have given. The puts and takes of 20 basis point expansion this quarter is 40 basis points came from currency, 50 basis points came from the Project Maximus, mainly on account of value-based selling and the lean and automation that we have done on multiple projects, offset by the furloughs and working day that we had. We also accrued a higher variable pay compared to last quarter, which was offset by some of the one-offs that we got. So that’s the broad margin work in a way. But if you look at a nine-month period margin, which is 21%, we have invested in our sales and marketing, which has gone up by 50 basis points on a year-on-year basis. So that has been absorbed in the margin.
The lower utilization of almost 1% has been absorbed in our margin. So this margin is after absorbing all of that, where on one side we are building capacity for future, on the other side we are investing in sales and marketing. And we still had a stable margin from that.
Do you have an outlook for next year now that you’re completing this 20,000 for the year? You’ve had a lower attrition as well this quarter.
We will have an outlook once we give our guidance for next year in April.
Also the wage hikes, what’s planned for the year and what kind of impact that could have on the margins from here on?
We just finished one cycle of our wage, which was in two parts in January and April. We haven’t yet decided on the next part. We will decide on that as we progress.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: Yeah, on AI, I think one of the points I shared, and we have a lot of that sort of information, was with our largest 200 clients, with over 90% of them, we are doing AI work. What we are doing in AI is unique AI services with clients. And also, we’ve reshaped all of our existing services leveraging AI. And for example, we are using agents in several of our service lines to help enhance either growth or productivity. So that’s what we are sharing in terms of what our impact is.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Thank you, Ritu. The next question is from Mansi Dave from ET Now.
Good afternoon, Salil and Jayesh. This is Mansi Dave from ET Now, ET Now Swadesh. My question is on demand visibility, tech spending, and AI adoption. Now, looking at the constant currency growth scenarios and commentary around fewer billing days and deal timing, how are clients thinking about calendar year 2026 tech spending, especially discretionary versus transformational-led programs? And at the same time, pace of enterprise AI adoption as well as tech spending outlook are amongst the key monitorables which we were looking towards. How does the scenario look like, and how are the pricing models evolving according to you?
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: So I’ll start with that, maybe a little bit on the pricing. Jayesh might have some views. On the demand, we see good demand outlook in the sense of we have had strong large deals. Our large deals pipeline remains healthy. And we are seeing in the two industries that I mentioned on financial services, on an energy, retail, sorry, energy, resources, utility services, the way that our work on AI is going and the way the deals have shaped up, we see a good outlook as we look even beyond this financial year into the next financial year. On financial services specifically, we see discretionary spend and good traction in what we are seeing across the market. Having said that, overall, we want to still see all of the other industries and segments start to show that. But these two are definitely something that we are seeing today.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Yeah. And on the pricing, I think as the newer and newer technology evolves, every time there is a change like that, you see a new pricing model evolving as well. We are seeing multiple new pricing models evolving. Some of them are being led by us, whether it is outcome-based pricing or whether it is pricing which is specific to agents, et cetera. So a little early in my mind in terms of calling out specifically what are the pricing models going to evolve on this. But everybody is testing new pricing models at this point in time. Thank you. The next question is from Srishti Achar from The Economic Times.
Hi, happy New Year to all of you. So a couple of quick questions. One, I wanted to know on the sharp decline in operating margins that we’re seeing. So I want to know if the impact is beyond the labor code charges that the company has taken. And I also wanted to know in terms of there has also been a sequential decline in your top contribution, revenue contribution from your top five and top 10 clients. So give us a sense of why that is happening and what the next couple of quarters look like on that. On the third, I also wanted to know as far as, sorry, this is the last one. So I also wanted to know in terms of the whole H-1B row that is going on. So this morning also, we saw some claims of employees being deported on the same as well.
I wanted to just know what is going on around that.
Yeah. So if you look at the margins, if you’re looking at reported margins, yes, the reported margins were impacted because of labor codes. But if you look at the adjusted margins, as we have called it out also, the adjusted margins have actually expanded. If you exclude the impact of labor codes, adjusted margins have expanded by 20 basis points sequentially. And on a full year basis, it’s remained 21%, which is similar to our last year margins. And that, as I said earlier, that was despite after absorbing the investment that we have done in sales and marketing, which would have impacted margins by 50 basis points, after absorbing the impact of lower utilization, which is building capacity for future. So after absorbing both of that, we have been able to maintain margins. You had a second question.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: Client contribution.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Yeah, client contribution. I think sequentially, client contribution is not a way to see in my mind because there is a seasonality involved, right? Every Q3, you typically have furloughs, et cetera, which would have impacts on specific clients, and larger the clients, the larger will be the impact of furloughs if there is one in that account. Typically, you will see that year on year, and we don’t really see a significant change in the year-on-year growth metrics.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: On your last question, I just want to read out, no Infosys employee has been apprehended by any U.S. authority. A few months ago, one of our employees was denied entry into the U.S. and was sent back to India.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Thank you. The next question is from Chandra Shrikanth from Moneycontrol.
Hi, Salil. Just to follow up to that, so this employee who wasn’t allowed and sent back, are you contesting that in any form? Secondly, one of the big trends this quarter we’ve seen is a big acquisition from Coforge, where they acquired Encora for $2.35 billion. TCS has acquired Coastal Cloud for $700 million. So can we expect more action on the M&A front? Are there assets that are attractive? If you can, take us through your M&A strategy. Thank you.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: On M&A, so we have, as we’ve looked at over the last few quarters, we’ve done acquisitions on cyber, on consulting, and energy services. And we will continue with that sort of an approach. We have a good pipeline of possible companies that we are looking at and discussions. We have strong support in terms of our balance sheet. So we will continue with that. It’s not something that is different in that sense from what we were doing in the past. We have a set of areas. We are also looking sort of in geographies which are new. We are looking at expanding in some service areas where we can go deeper. So that will continue on.
On the IC, any other details that you can share?
That’s what I had to share.
Okay.
Thank you.
Jayesh, sorry, just one thing on the labor code. So according to your fact sheet, Infosys has incurred INR 1,289 crore on account of labor codes. So has the full impact been absorbed or will it sort of be staggered? How will that work?
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: So whatever is to be accrued till this quarter has been accrued in the books, right? Which is for the, I mean, labor code has impact across multiple aspects, whether it is gratuity, whether it is other aspects of wage, and that has been accrued. There will be an ongoing impact of roughly around 15 basis points that will happen on an annual basis. That is a regular impact of the labor code as we go ahead.
Okay. Thank you.
Thanks, Chandra. The next question is from Haripriya Suresh from Reuters News.
Good evening. A few questions. One on the H-1B front. Will you be looking at making new applications, or is it primarily just hiring in the U.S. and the employees that you have already? In retail, is there specific softness because of how America is right now? And when do you sort of see that recovery? And third is, Salil, your term for CEO ends in March 2027, at least the five-year term. What is the succession plan? Has that started, and what is that looking like? Thank you.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: On the first one, I think on H-1B and what the recruiting is, so our approach is very clear. We have, as we had shared in the past, a majority of our employees in the U.S. who are not requiring any visa situation. We are continuing with our deployments and our delivery using a mix of what we have, work in the U.S. and work in India, so no changes to that approach.
Any newer applications? No.
At this stage, we are continuing with our process because there’s an existing set. We will examine it as it comes up in the future. On retail, what we are seeing is there are some places where we see positives. There are some places where we see different client situations which are under some cost containment for that sub-vertical within that. So we are waiting, and we are pushing to make sure that the retail pipeline, which is growing, becomes converted into what we drive into the retail growth. On my own situation, no comment.
Like overall, as a company looking at succession planning?
Yeah, no comment from my side.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Thank you, Haripriya. The next question is from Avik Das from Business Standard.
Thank you. Quick questions. One, a little bit more on the BFSI commentary, because what we understand that financial services, BFSI overall has been improving in the North American geography. So which sectors or which subsegments within that sector is actually growing, if you can just throw some more light, Salil? And North America seems to have degrown on a constant currency basis. Any reason? Was it a client-specific, or was it any sector-specific, maybe retail that pulled it down, if you can just throw some more light? And Jayesh, there seems to be that idea that new large deals will be smaller or maybe far and few to come by as more AI-led deals sort of take the center stage.
Giving that in consideration, how do you think the margins are going to play out across the industry and for you in specific in the long run, if you can just throw? Thank you.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: So I’ll start off on financial services. We see a good traction across most of the sub-verticals we have within financial services. So we are seeing good traction with retail banks. We are seeing good traction with what are considered mid-market banks. We’re seeing good traction on payments. We’re seeing good traction in the mortgage area. So overall, pretty strong. Some are stronger, some are less strong, but overall, we see a good demand environment. There’s good adoption of AI across the spectrum with our large financial services clients. We recently announced, for example, a partnership with Cognition, which is very strong, and we are working with them jointly in some of the financial services companies. On North America, nothing very specific. It’s a mix of different industries and different plays. The overall situation on energy, utilities, on financial services remains strong.
On some of our other verticals, remains something that is coming back over time, but not yet. On the third, on the margin.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Yeah. On the large deals, if you look at the deals that we have signed, we have signed $4.8 billion this quarter. If you look at even on a nine-month basis, compared to the last year, our large deal signings have gone up. So while there is always a productivity ask that goes up because of AI, et cetera, there is also a lot of deals that are getting structured because of cost optimization or cost takeout, et cetera, from the client side. So a lot is getting bundled when you look at it. And on the margin side, large deals always have slightly lower margin than the company average. But as a portfolio, you always make up on the margin because the new work that comes up comes up at a better margin, et cetera. So that’s a trend that we have seen.
We have not seen a change in the trend from that perspective. Thank you, Avik. The next question is from Sanjana from The Hindu Business Line.
Hi. Hi. Good evening, gentlemen. So manufacturing and Europe, they have grown significantly for Infosys this quarter. Both of these were previously seeing some softness. So can you expand on what were some factors contributing to this growth? And also, I think the tech budgets for the calendar year 2026 are expected to be rolled out soon. Based on client conversations, what are you hearing? Is there any sign of uptick in discretionary spending? And also, the guidance was raised upwards despite seasonalities and uncertainties. Any reasons for this? And the last question, regarding the collaboration with Cognition, which is an AI startup, what were the gaps in your AI portfolio that you were looking to bridge with this particular collaboration? How is this contributing to your all AI momentum? Just that. Thank you.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: So, starting on manufacturing in Europe, firstly, I think Europe’s been in a good position for us for many quarters. And actually, even manufacturing’s had a strong activity across the board. We’ve seen good traction. There are pieces within the manufacturing client base, which are benefiting massively from the AI growth. For example, we do work with companies that provide power solutions. We do work with companies that provide manufacturing into those solutions that provide engine capacity, that provide generating capacity. So there’s a lot of those pieces which are doing well, those client industry components which are doing well, and where our team is really active on that. We’ve also got some good traction within manufacturing on the engineering part of the work, engineering services part of the work. The second one.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Tech projects for 2024.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: Tech projects.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Discretionary spend.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: On the discretionary spend overall, so first, on financial services, we are definitely seeing that what we shared earlier. We are seeing a good set of deals which have happened, and then we see that with the AI traction we have in that industry, we will become more the next financial year will have better outcomes than this financial year on that, and financial services is going well this year. Similarly, on energy and utilities, we are seeing a good set of deals that have come together across the whole industry vertical, and that is helping us with that momentum, so those are the ones we are seeing. On the others, we are not seeing any deterioration, which is one sign, and we see overall, the macro environment seems to be where people are expecting maybe some interest rate cuts, so we’ll see if that happens, especially in the U.S.
Then some of the other expansions we are doing, for example, we have a program where we’re working with some of our smaller sets of clients, and those are growing pretty well. Overall, we feel that as we look out into the next year, these are things that support our growth. On AI itself, we are seeing what I shared earlier, these six areas where we see potential good growth over the next several years, not just in the next year. That will, as we start to execute on that, that will help us. On Cognition.
Sorry.
Which one was that?
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Cognition.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: Cognition, right? On Cognition, so it’s not so much a gap. So what the Cognition people are doing is they’ve built an agent which is working to do software development. And we are working with our clients as a partner with them, where we are also doing, we are building agent capacity. And we are enabling those agents to work in a client environment. So the advantage is we have a detailed understanding of how the client technology landscape is set up. And we have a good understanding of what are the industry constraints or opportunities. And that combined with the software agent with Cognition becomes a very powerful combination in many clients. So that’s something that will expand quite nicely here.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Thank you. The next question is from Jas Bardhia from the Mint.
Good evening, sirs. Just a two-pronged question. In what segments and for what clients will you all be using these AI software engineers? And how will this impact delivery? How will this impact billing? And more importantly, how will it impact future hiring, that is FY27 onwards, considering you’re using a lot of these AI software engineers to work in client projects actively?
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: So what we see there first, where will it be used? My sense is, as I’ve interacted with our clients and with some of these partner companies, the usage is going to be across essentially every industry, every client over time. So it’s a function of what is the client landscape and what it is that they want to achieve. My sense is there are, for example, in those six that I described earlier, there are places where the economics have changed completely from a client perspective. If you take legacy modernization, here, if you use software agents plus our expertise plus our knowledge, the whole economics from a client perspective becomes much better. And that allows a lot of these projects which were not happening before to start happening. So it’s not a case of something which was being done, which is now being done differently.
That will also happen. But this is more a case of something which was not being done, which will now start to happen. So in that light, we will continue to hire. As Jayesh mentioned earlier, we will announce, as we do in April, our plan for next year. We are going to hire on campus. We know that. And this year, we’ve done 18,000. We will do 20,000 campus hires. And we will continue in that sort of a range for next year because these are new areas of demand. And so it’s incremental to what we are doing. And we will have our people working and these software agents, which makes the overall economics for the client much better.
The billing, sir?
Billing, what was the question?
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: The impression of billing.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: The value that we create will drive the billing. So a lot of these things will be based on the traditional ways, as Jayesh was saying, of billing. And a lot over time will change as the AI market itself develops. So today, there is not any immediate change. But over time, we’ll see that.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Thank you, Jas. The next question is from Pollami Chatterjee from The Financial Express.
Good evening. So I wanted to ask, recently, we’ve seen across Indian IT, there’s been a trend. There’s been a slew of AI-related acquisitions. So what is your approach with regards to that? And also, IT companies are now competitively building hiring specialized AI talent among freshers who are getting paid significantly more. So what does the talent pool look like? And what are you looking at when you’re hiring these set of people?
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: In terms of acquisitions in the landscape, there are not so many AI services companies today that we see. What we do see are companies where we are partnering, which are really AI, whether they build agents or models or foundation tools, which exist. Those are the ones we are partnering. We will look in our acquisition approach to AI as they start to appear as larger AI services companies. We have some that we are looking at, which is part of our overall acquisition, meaning there are other things in the acquisition as well. In terms of the compensation, I think Infosys has always been a leader in making sure that we put new constructs in regard to our employees and the new people we recruit.
What we have now done with the most recent approach and launch is put together an approach for very good software engineers who will work in AI and who will have that level of expertise to be specialized engineers within our structure and with different and higher or much higher compensation levels. So in the AI world, there will be different types of people working jointly with AI agents with different levels of training. And we want to make sure that we remain in the leading position in that recruitment environment. And with that, what we have launched for specialized engineers, that’s the approach we’ve put in place.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Thank you, Pollami. The next question is from Uma Kannan from Deccan Herald.
Good evening, gentlemen. So last year, you announced AI-first GCC model. So I want to understand how it is shaping up. And a follow-up question on partnership. This month alone, you have announced a couple of partnerships. Going forward, will there be more AI-native collaboration? And one more question. Some of your peers have made it mandatory to stay at the office for six hours. So do you have any plans when it comes to office requirement, office hours requirement, or will you continue the present hybrid flexible model? Thank you.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: So on the GCC, we have, as you mentioned, launched the AI-specific approach. We have a lot of client activity in that. We have some clients we are already working on that. There are several others which are in the pipeline for large AI-specific capability building in GCC, so beyond regular GCC work that we’re doing. And that’s going pretty well at this stage. In terms of partnerships, we will have a number of different partnerships because there are several companies, smaller companies, but with great capability on AI, on the foundation model, on coding, on agent development, on customer service. So we will continue with that because those are the areas which our clients are most interested in. And we will continue. We are already working with those companies. But we will have these sort of strategic announcements as well.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: The third one.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: Work from office.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Work from.
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: Oh, work from. Yeah, no, we are not making any change to our approach. We will remain flexible in the way we are today, in the way that our employees are interacting with the company and with our clients.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Thank you, Padmini. Sorry, thank you, Uma. The next question is from Padmini Dhruvaraj from The New Indian Express.
Hi, good evening. Sorry if these questions have been already asked. So one is, going forward, do you see labor code having an impact on profit margins? And do you see this having an impact on your appraisals going forward? And the U.S. government plans to cap their credit card limit, interest limit at 10%. So do you see this also having an impact?
Salil Parekh, Chief Executive Officer, Infosys: So let me start with the second one, labor code. Jayesh will mention. I can also mention on the appraisal. On the U.S. credit card, what you mentioned, that is something that the U.S. banking system will look at and how they have to implement it. What we do with our clients, with the large banks, is help them as they have to go through different regulatory changes. And if that requires our help and support, we will continue to do that. On the margin impact, Jayesh will mention the number. On the appraisals, there’ll be no change in our appraisal approach.
Rishi, Moderator, Infosys: Yeah, so on the labor code, whatever is the impact till quarter, till December, and is already taken in our financial statements, that’s a one-time impact because the regulation has changed. And there is an impact for the number of years the employees would have served for us, et cetera. So that impact has already been taken in the financial statements. There’ll also be an ongoing impact because of the wage code that has changed. And that will be taken as and when we go through. That is approximately 15 basis points on an annual basis. Thank you, Padmini. Thank you. With that, we come to the end of this press conference. We thank our friends from media. Thank you, Salil, and thank you, Jayesh.
Before we conclude, please note that the archived webcast of this press conference will be available on the Infosys website and on our YouTube channel later today. Thank you very much, and please join us for Hi-T Outside. Code that has changed. And that will be taken as and when we go through. That is approximately 15 basis points on an annual basis. Thank you, Padmini. Thank you. With that, we come to the end of this press conference. We thank our friends from media. Thank you, Salil, and thank you, Jayesh.