Consolidated net profit stood at Rs 3,436 crore during the quarter ended June 30. Revenue for the April-June quarter of current fiscal was up nearly 17 per cent year-on-year to Rs 16,782 crore.
India's second largest IT services company forecast a 10.8-12.3 per cent sales growth in US dollar terms for 2016-17, down from the previous forecast of 11.8-13.8 per cent as it factored in uncertainties arising out of Britain's decision to exit from the European Union.
This was more than 8.54 per cent slide in stock on March 13, 2014 but less than 22.24 per cent slump witnessed on April 12, 2013. The previous two big slides too followed the company reporting sluggish growth in revenues.
"We had unanticipated headwinds in discretionary spending in consulting services and package implementations as well as slower project ramp-ups in large deals that we had won in earlier quarters, resulting in a lower-than-expected growth in Q1," Sikka said.
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The full-year revenue guidance at 10.5-12 per cent in constant currency terms is lower than its April forecast of 11.5-13.5 per cent.
In US dollar terms, the consolidated net profit rose 7.4 per cent to USD 511 million in the first quarter of 2016-17, while revenue rose 10.9 per cent to USD 2.5 billion.
Sikka admitted that the company's performance was "not quite up to the mark".
The operating margin at 24.1 per cent was impacted by wage hikes (1.4 per cent impact) and visa charges (0.8 per cent), but was partly offset by cost optimisation efforts.
The Earnings per share or EPS was Rs 15.03 for the quarter, 13.4 per cent higher than the year ago period.
"As we look ahead to the future, clearly (Brexit) is something that many banks are worried about and so forth. In the near term we don't know how this will play out...So, given the visibility, we lowered our guidance," Sikka said.
Infosys, which is chasing a USD 20 billion revenue aspiration by 2020, said that the performance in one quarter will not hold the company back from reaching that milestone.
Gartner Research Director Arup Roy said Infosys numbers had been "lukewarm" and are reflective of the state of affairs of the market.
"Financial services has a tepid environment. Infosys has a higher revenue share coming from discretionary spend and therefore has taken the first beating," Roy said.
Earlier this year, industry body Nasscom had lowered its growth forecast for software exports to 10-12 per cent in the year to March 31, 2017, down from 12-14 per cent in 2015-16.
Attributing the rise in attrition to seasonality, Chief Operating Officer UB Pravin Rao said "typically in Q1, we have higher exits due to (people going for) higher studies".
While the attrition levels have shot up, Infosys has been able to retain "high performers", he added.
The technology major has relaunched its ESOP programme after a gap of about 13 years for junior to middle level management. This will, subsequently, be extended to middle management and senior leaders.