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Infosys Profit Falls 0.9 Pct but Outlook Improves

Indian outsourcing company Infosys quarterly profit falls 0.9 pct but outlook improves

Infosys Technologies Ltd. reported a slight decrease in quarterly profit Friday but raised its revenue and earnings forecasts — a signal the worst may be over for India's software services industry after being hard hit by the global downturn.

Infosys, India's second largest outsourcing firm, said net income fell 0.9 percent, to $317.0 million in the quarter ended September 30 based on international accounting standards, beating its own forecast.

Revenues for the period were $1.15 billion, a 5.1 percent decline from the same period a year ago but a 2.9 percent improvement from the prior quarter.

"The business climate has improved," said Infosys chief executive S. Gopalakrishnan.

But, he added: "We should remain cautious at this point. Globally, yes, there are signs of a recovery, but there is still concern."

Sandeep Muthangi, an analyst at Mumbai's IIFL Capital, also cautioned that it's too early to say "turnaround" because revenue growth hasn't gained momentum. He doesn't expect that to happen until after March of next year.

"The results are decent enough but revenue acceleration will not happen this year," he said.

Infosys said it expects revenues for the fiscal year to be $4.6 billion to $4.62 billion, about 1 percent less than last year, but a more optimistic forecast than it made in July. It gets nearly two-thirds of its revenue from North America and one-third of revenues from banking and financial services companies.

The company said earnings per American Depository share for the fiscal year would be $2.09 to $2.10, 6.7 percent to 7.1 percent less than last year. That's more optimistic than its July forecast of an 11.1 percent to 12.4 percent decline in earnings per share.

Infosys boosted its cash holdings by nearly 56 percent, to 137.96 billion rupees ($2.8 billion), and added 35 new clients during the quarter.

Gopalakrishnan said he expects information technology budgets at client companies, which fell about 7 percent this fiscal year, to remain flat next year.

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