2 Sources
[1]
HCLTech wins $1.14bn deal with a European firm, its biggest since 2023
The unnamed Fortune Global 50 client is handing HCLTech its digital workplace and network overhaul, in the Indian IT giant's largest win in almost three years. HCLTech has signed a $1.14 billion contract with a major European company, the Indian IT services group said Thursday, in what is its largest single deal since a $2.1 billion agreement with Verizon in August 2023. The client is described only as a Fortune Global 50 firm, and neither side has named it publicly. The deal covers what HCLTech calls an AI-driven operating model for the client's global digital workplace and enterprise networks, spanning five and a half years from July 2026 to December 2031, with an option to extend by another five. HCLTech has said the business is entirely net-new, not an expansion or renewal of an existing account, which matters for a company whose deal wins are watched closely as a proxy for enterprise IT spending. Shares in HCLTech jumped as much as 6.3% on the news, dragging the wider Nifty IT index up around 2.7%, though the exact size of the move varied depending on when during the trading session it was measured. At roughly $230 million a year, the contract adds meaningfully to HCLTech's revenue base without materially altering its overall growth trajectory, given the company has guided for 1% to 4% revenue growth this fiscal year. Financial terms beyond the headline figure remain thin. HCLTech has not disclosed margin expectations for the contract, staffing plans, or which of its business lines, engineering, cloud, or AI services, will carry the bulk of the work. The company reports its first-quarter results for the current fiscal year on July 13, a date that will likely bring more colour on how the deal factors into near-term guidance. The choice to withhold the client's name is not unusual for deals of this size, where non-disclosure clauses are standard practice, but it does leave outside observers guessing at exactly which sector will absorb the AI-led overhaul. A "digital workplace and enterprise networks" scope typically spans everything from employee device management to internal collaboration tools and the underlying network infrastructure that connects a multinational's offices, meaning the contract likely touches tens of thousands of end users once it is fully rolled out. The win lands amid a busier few weeks for HCLTech's deal pipeline. The company completed its acquisition of Jaspersoft from Cloud Software Group in December, alongside roughly $400 million in other acquisitions, and separately became the lead investor in Sarvam, the Bengaluru AI startup that became India's newest unicorn last month. Rival Persistent Systems also signed a $650 million US contract days before HCLTech's announcement, underscoring how competitive the market for large-scale enterprise IT contracts has become. That competitive backdrop cuts both ways for India's IT sector. Big contract wins are increasingly framed around AI-native delivery rather than traditional headcount-based outsourcing, a shift that has forced HCLTech and its peers to rebuild pitches around automation and fewer billable hours per dollar of revenue, the same logic behind Cognizant's $600 million purchase of Astreya as it races to own the AI infrastructure layer. It has not been an entirely smooth adjustment. Tata Consultancy Services took a $70 million hit last month after losing a US Supreme Court appeal, a reminder that legal and regulatory exposure sits alongside the commercial pressure these companies are navigating. No executives from HCLTech or the client were quoted in the disclosure, and the company has not said whether it plans to name the customer once the contract is under way. Analysts covering the stock will likely press for more detail on the July 13 earnings call, particularly on how quickly the contract ramps into billable revenue. For now, the $1.14 billion figure is the headline number that will anchor HCLTech's order book heading into that call, alongside the open question of how much of it converts into visible revenue growth over the next two quarters. Investors reacted quickly to the announcement itself, but the bigger test for HCLTech is whether AI-native, outcome-based contracts like this one can keep replacing the slower, headcount-heavy deals that once defined the sector.
[2]
HCL Tech shares zoom 6% after $1.14 billion AI deal with Fortune Global 50 firm
HCL Tech shares surged following a significant $1.14 billion deal with a European Fortune Global 50 firm to manage its digital workplace and networks. This new business, spanning July 2026 to December 2031, boosts HCL Tech's prospects. The company also recently invested in AI startup Sarvam AI. Despite a slight miss on FY26 revenue guidance, Q4 saw a 4.2% net profit increase. HCL Tech shares rose as much as 6% to an intraday high of Rs 1,139 on the BSE on Friday after the company announced a strategic partnership with a Europe-headquartered Fortune Global 50 firm. The deal is valued at $1.14 billion over its initial term and represents entirely new business for the company. Under the partnership, HCL Tech will establish an AI-driven operating model to transform and manage the customer's Global Digital Workplace and Enterprise Networks. The initial term of the agreement runs from July 2026 to December 2031 and can be extended for a further period of five years, the company said in a regulatory filing. The deal comes weeks after HCL Tech announced a Rs 1,427 crore (around $150 million) investment in Sarvam AI to acquire a 10.46% stake in the Indian artificial intelligence startup. As part of the partnership, HCLTech will support Sarvam AI's research and development efforts focused on next-generation frontier AI agentic models, coding models and cybersecurity applications. Also read: Rs 19 lakh crore shocker! TCS, Infosys & 2 IT giants crash 50% from peak: Is the absolute worst yet to come HCL Tech guidanceThe company has guided for revenue growth of 1% to 4% year-on-year in constant currency terms, with services revenue expected to grow between 1.5% and 4.5%. EBIT margin is projected in the range of 17.5% to 18.5%. HCL Tech Q4 snapshotThe company reported a 4.2% rise in consolidated net profit for the March quarter at Rs 4,488 crore, compared to Rs 4,307 crore in the same period last year. Revenue from operations for Q4FY26 came in at Rs 33,981 crore, marking a 12% increase from Rs 30,246 crore recorded in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year. On a sequential basis, revenue rose marginally by 0.3% from Rs 33,872 crore reported in Q3FY26. However, in constant currency terms, revenue declined 3.3% quarter-on-quarter and grew 2.4% year-on-year. Revenue in dollar terms stood at $3,682 million, down 2.9% sequentially but up 5.3% compared to last year. As a result, the company missed its financial year 2026 revenue growth guidance. What was projected to be a growth between 4% to 4.5%, turned out to be 3.9% for the year. Services revenue in constant currency slipped 0.1% quarter-on-quarter but increased 4.2% year-on-year. Revenue from advanced AI stood at $155 million during the quarter, reflecting a 6.1% sequential rise in constant currency. HCL Tech share price is down 34% since the beginning of the year. (Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Share
Copy Link
HCLTech announced a $1.14 billion contract with an unnamed European Fortune Global 50 firm to transform its digital workplace and enterprise networks using AI. The deal, spanning July 2026 to December 2031, is the IT services company's largest win since its $2.1 billion Verizon deal in August 2023. HCLTech shares jumped 6% on the news, lifting the broader Nifty IT index by 2.7%.
HCLTech has secured a $1.14 billion AI deal with a Fortune Global 50 firm headquartered in Europe, marking the Indian IT services company's largest contract win since its $2.1 billion Verizon deal in August 2023
1
. The client's identity remains undisclosed due to standard non-disclosure clauses, though the company is described as a major European firm1
. The announcement triggered a sharp rally in HCLTech shares, which surged as much as 6.3% to an intraday high of Rs 1,139 on the BSE, while also dragging the wider Nifty IT index up around 2.7%2
. This European firm partnership represents entirely new business for HCLTech, not an expansion or renewal of an existing account, which matters significantly for a company whose deal wins are closely watched as a proxy for enterprise IT spending1
.
Source: ET
Under the strategic partnership, HCLTech will establish an AI-driven operating model to transform and manage the customer's global digital workplace and enterprise networks
2
. The digital workplace transformation scope typically encompasses everything from employee device management to internal collaboration tools and the underlying network infrastructure connecting a multinational's offices, meaning the contract likely touches tens of thousands of end users once fully rolled out1
. The initial term runs from July 2026 to December 2031, spanning five and a half years, with an option to extend for another five years1
. At roughly $230 million annually, the contract adds meaningfully to HCLTech's revenue base, though it won't materially alter the company's overall growth trajectory given its guidance for 1% to 4% revenue growth this fiscal year1
.The deal arrives weeks after HCLTech announced a Rs 1,427 crore investment, approximately $150 million, to acquire a 10.46% stake in Sarvam AI, the Bengaluru-based artificial intelligence startup that recently became India's newest unicorn . As part of the partnership, HCLTech will support Sarvam AI's research and development efforts focused on next-generation frontier AI agentic models, coding models, and cybersecurity applications
2
. The win lands amid a busier period for HCLTech's deal pipeline, which included completing its acquisition of Jaspersoft from Cloud Software Group in December, alongside roughly $400 million in other acquisitions1
.Related Stories
The competitive backdrop for large-scale enterprise networks management contracts has intensified across the IT sector. Rival Persistent Systems signed a $650 million US contract days before HCLTech's announcement, underscoring how fierce competition has become
1
. Big contract wins are increasingly framed around AI-native delivery rather than traditional headcount-based outsourcing, a shift forcing HCLTech and its peers to rebuild pitches around automation and fewer billable hours per dollar of revenue1
. The company has guided for services revenue growth between 1.5% and 4.5%, with EBIT margin projected in the range of 17.5% to 18.5%2
.HCLTech reported a 4.2% rise in consolidated net profit for the March quarter at Rs 4,488 crore, compared to Rs 4,307 crore in the same period last year
2
. Revenue from operations for Q4FY26 came in at Rs 33,981 crore, marking a 12% increase from Rs 30,246 crore recorded in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year2
. However, the company missed its revenue guidance for FY26, achieving 3.9% growth instead of the projected 4% to 4.5%2
. Revenue from advanced AI stood at $155 million during the quarter, reflecting a 6.1% sequential rise in constant currency2
. Despite the positive news, the stock market has been challenging for HCLTech, with the share price down 34% since the beginning of the year2
. Analysts will likely press for more detail on the July 13 earnings call, particularly on how quickly the contract ramps into billable revenue and whether AI-native, outcome-based contracts like this one can keep replacing the slower, headcount-heavy deals that once defined the sector1
.Summarized by
Navi
1
Policy and Regulation

2
Policy and Regulation

3
Policy and Regulation
