In dollar terms, net income stood at USD 944 million for the quarter under the Indian Accounting standards, or Rs 32.06 per share. Consolidated gross revenue on constant currency terms jumped 14.2 per cent to Rs 29,305 crore or USD 4.36 billion, Chief Executive and Managing Director N Chandrasekaran said.
The numbers, however, are not so robust on a sequential basis.
While net profit slipped 0.4 per cent due to forex volatilities and other externalities like 8-12 per cent salary hike impacting margins, revenue rose just 3.1 per cent.
"The very strong growth was driven by multiple factors with all our key vertical and markets, especially continental Europe, doing extremely well.
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"Europe, excluding England, clipped at 2.8 per cent, against 2.5 per cent growth that North America saw. For Europe, this was the best quarter in over a year. Also, we had the best year in India at a growth of 8.5 per cent," he said.
While net income slipped 0.4 per cent from the fourth quarter of last fiscal, revenue inched up a paltry 3 per cent, the company said.
Net profit margin also declined both sequentially as well as annually by 73 bps and 69 bps, respectively to 21.6 per cent, Gopinathan said. He attributed the fall to currency fluctuations and the 8-12 percentage points salary hike announced in the beginning of the fiscal year.
"The salary hike alone shaved off almost 200 bps from margins," he said, and parried a question on margin outlook, citing company policy.
Revenue from its largest market North America inched up 2.5 per cent to USD 2.33 billion, while that from England bettered at 3.8 per cent to USD 650 million.
But India was the star performer among the emerging
markets, clipping at 8.5 per cent or USD 270 million, which Chandrasekaran attributed to increased adoption of technology by corporates.
Chandrasekaran discounted the impact of Brexit on the firm's operations in England, saying Diligenta, its British arm, offers an essential service which will not be impacted.
On the overall impact of the Brexit, he said, "So far I have not heard any of my existing clients asking for a price revision or hinting at lower IT spends. And this, I say after spending close to 10 days in Europe after the Brexit vote and I did not get any negative feedback and so I have nothing to be cautioned against too much. But we are watching out."
"If the way Britain elected a new premier (Theresa May took charge yesterday), as against the expected October deadline, it shows that this will not be as bad as feared," he added.
The market reaction was strange as traditionally, the TCS stock always closed in the red in the run-up to the earnings.
The company's cash/cash equivalents more than halved to Rs 421 crore from Rs 950 crore in the March quarter of the last fiscal. It also saw its total assets declining to Rs 13,592 crore from Rs 13,769 crore during the same period last year.
The communications sector fared the best with a revenue growth of 7 per cent at USD 490 million, followed by life-sciences and healthcare vertical which managed to clip in at 3.9 per cent at USD 320 million in income, Chandrasekaran said.