HCL Technologies also announced that it has elevated chief operating officer C Vijayakumar as the new CEO, following the departure of Anant Gupta, who has left the company to launch a new technology investment firm.
It saw profit growing to Rs 2,014 crore in the said quarter from Rs 1,726 crore a year-ago. Revenues were up 14 per cent at Rs 11,519 crore, as per US GAAP accounting norms.
"I do agree that some of the traditional discretionary spends are a little bit soft, but they are being more than offset by disruptive discretionary spends. So, we remain very optimistic about our growth," Vijayakumar said.
Its larger rivals, Tata Consultancy Services and Infosys, posted muted numbers and admitted that they were witnessing softness in the banking and financial services sector and client spending.
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In constant currency terms, HCL Tech's revenues were up 12.8 per cent year-on-year.
Angel Broking's V-P Research-IT, Sarabjit Kour Nangra said the results were "more or less in line with expectations".
Besides, HCL Technologies announced the acquisition of Butler America Aerospace for USD 85 million in cash. The buyout will strengthen its position in the aerospace and defence engineering services space, the company said.
Terming the September quarter as a "great quarter", Vijayakumar said that while a lot of conversations were around "pessimism" for IT services, he remained positive about the company's ability to be relevant for clients.
He added that the annual guidance does not factor in revenue from its recent acquisitions, including the USD 200 million takeover of Geometric, and Butler.
In dollar terms, the company's net profit grew 14.2 per cent to USD 301.2 million while revenues rose 11.5 per cent to USD 1.72 billion compared with the year-ago period.
The company has announced a dividend of Rs 6 per share.
HCL signed 12 transformational deals this quarter, across
service lines and industry verticals.
The company's cash and cash equivalents stood at Rs 1,242.8 crore at the end of September 30, 2016.
It saw broad-based growth across all revenue segments. Revenues from Americas and Europe grew by 17.9 per cent and 7.3 per cent, respectively in constant currency terms.
Business services revenues, however, declined 11.3 per cent in the said quarter.
Vertical growth was led by retail and CPG at 34.2 per cent, followed by public services at 24.1 per cent and lifesciences and healthcare at 14.2 per cent.