The infrastructure conglomerate's total income from operations inched up to Rs 26,286.98 crore during the quarter under review, from Rs 25,928.07 crore a year ago.
"During the beginning of the financial year we had given a guidance of 12-15 per cent growth in both order inflow as well as revenue. But looking at the current situation and considering the several headwinds the sector is facing, we have lowered the targets to 10 per cent," group chief financial officer R Shankar Raman told reporters here.
Explaining the execution challenges, he said "there are challenges of right-of-way, land acquisition, regulatory clearances, shifting of utilities, among others. We do not expect these to change soon so such headwinds will continue to be a challenge. Apart from this liquidity and unwillingness of the clients to make payments on time are also impacting business," Raman said.
He based the 10 per cent optimism to the fourth quarter which normally is a busy season for the sector as government departments will be using up their annual budgets in the March quarter.
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Consolidated order-book stood at a healthy Rs 2,58,585 crore as of end December, which was only 1.4 per cent higher on a year-on-year basis. International order book constituted 29 per cent of the total.
During the reporting quarter, infrastructure segment
won fresh orders worth Rs 21,516 crore despite sluggish investment climate, and some of the anticipated orders did not materialise due to delay in bid process, he added.
Its IT and technology services achieved customer revenue of Rs 2,454 crore during the quarter, registering growth of 9 per cent. Likewise, financial services logged customer revenue of Rs 2,108 crore, up 11 per cent, driven by higher loan disbursements mainly in microfinance, housing and wholesale finance.
Raman said domestic growth appears to take longer time as investment momentum remains weak and the banking system is burdened by NPA overhang.
"The government should understand that all the money in the system is not black and the market is not only about speculation, but it is for investment as well, though there are speculations," he said.
Raman added that challenging business conditions are expected to continue in the next few quarters until the government moves to lift growth through "infra spend and tax reforms take effect".