Charged Alpha Stock Encyclopedia
Wipro (WIT) Q1 FY2027 — Wipro (NYSE: WIT) reported Q1 FY2027 (quarter ended June 30, 2026) on July 16: gross revenue Rs 244.8 billion ($2,585.9M), +1.0% QoQ and +10.6% YoY in rupees; IT services segment revenue $2,614.5M, -1.4% QoQ and +1.0% YoY, or -1.2% QoQ and +0.9% YoY in constant currency. Net income Rs 33.6 billion ($354.6M), -4.7% QoQ and +0.6% YoY; EPS Rs 3.20 ($0.03), exactly in line with the $0.03 consensus. IT services operating margin fell to 16.0%, down 1.3pp QoQ and 1.2pp YoY (Indian coverage called the consolidated figure a 15-quarter low). Total bookings $3,370M, -2.4% QoQ in constant currency, while large deal bookings (>=$30M TCV) rose 12.9% QoQ to $1,626M across 13 deals — so large deals are now 48% of all bookings while the smaller discretionary book shrinks. Voluntary attrition 13.9% on a trailing-12-month basis. Cash conversion stayed excellent: operating cash flow Rs 32.9 billion ($348M) at 98.0% of net income, free cash flow Rs 29,617M at 88.2% of net income. Balance sheet at June 30, 2026: cash Rs 88,444M ($934M) plus investments Rs 336,462M ($3,554M) against Rs 177,649M ($1,877M) of borrowings and zero long-term debt — roughly $2.6B net cash; total equity Rs 776,769M ($8,205M). Interim dividend of Rs 2 ($0.02) per share/ADS declared; management says more than $3B was returned to shareholders over the past year. Guidance for the September quarter: IT services revenue $2,574M-$2,627M, or -1.5% to +0.5% sequentially in constant currency — a negative midpoint. The stock trades near $1.86, just above a 52-week low of $1.80 and ~40% below the $3.09 high, at ~14x earnings with a 6.25% trailing dividend yield; JPMorgan cut it to Underweight with a $1.70 target on July 1, citing AI-driven pricing pressure. Our owner-earnings DCF (base ~$1.5B FCF, 0% vs +4% growth, 9/10/11% discount, 2% terminal, plus net cash) lands ~$2.08 probability-weighted, range $1.74-$2.52. Wall Street ADR consensus: Sell (0 buy / 2 hold / 5 sell), average target ~$2.00. Our call: HOLD, 3/5 — cheap and well-financed, but nothing has inflected. Wipro is one of India's largest IT-services companies, running applications, cloud, infrastructure and back-office operations for large Western corporations with more than 230,000 employees and business partners across 65 countries. Its Q1 FY2027 print was reported across Indian media as revenue up 10.6% year over year - and that number is a currency mirage. Wipro's own release states constant-currency IT services revenue grew just 0.9% YoY, and fell 1.2% sequentially; the entire gap is the rupee's decline against the dollar. If you own the New York ADS you are paid in dollars, and your growth was 1.0%. EPS of $0.03 (Rs 3.20) landed exactly in line on an already-lowered bar, and net income rose 0.6%. The margin is where the damage shows: IT services operating margin fell to 16.0%, down 1.3 points sequentially and 1.2 points YoY, with CFO Aparna Iyer conceding investments 'may create some near-term margin volatility.' A second under-covered signal sits in the order book: total bookings fell 2.4% QoQ in constant currency to $3,370M while large deals rose 12.9% to $1,626M across 13 signings - so large, low-margin vendor-consolidation and cost-takeout work is now 48% of all bookings while higher-margin discretionary work disappears. The offsetting case is real: operating cash flow was 98% of net income, free cash flow 88%, the balance sheet holds roughly $2.6B of net cash with zero long-term debt, more than $3B was returned to shareholders over the past year, and the shares yield 6.25% at ~14x earnings, already ~40% below last July's high and barely above a 52-week low. But September-quarter guidance of -1.5% to +0.5% sequential constant-currency growth has a negative midpoint, and JPMorgan cut the stock to Underweight at $1.70 on AI-driven pricing pressure. The structural question - whether AI compresses a labor-arbitrage model billed by the person - is genuinely unresolved. Our owner-earnings DCF lands ~$2.08 versus ~$1.86 today, but the conservative corner at an 11% discount rate is $1.74, below the current price. Our call: HOLD, 3/5 - you are paid 6.25% to wait for an answer nobody has yet. Not financial advice. THE CALL: HOLD (3/5, CHEAP AND WELL-FINANCED, BUT NOTHING HAS INFLECTED — PAID 6.25% TO WAIT ON AN UNRESOLVED AI QUESTION) — base-case value ~$2.08 vs ~$1.86 today. What to watch: The IT services operating margin climbing back above 17%, or a single quarter of positive constant-currency SEQUENTIAL growth, would say the squeeze is ending and push us more constructive; a drop under about $1.75 - the conservative corner of our own DCF - would create a genuine margin of safety and a stronger buy case. The thesis breaks the other way if total bookings fall again (they were already -2.4% QoQ in constant currency) or if guidance turns more negative than the current -1.5% to +0.5% range, which would confirm that AI-driven pricing pressure is structurally compressing the labor-arbitrage model rather than cyclically denting it. Watch bookings and the margin line above all else - reported revenue lags both by several quarters. Also on YouTube: @ChargedAlpha DISCLAIMER: For informational and educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before any investment decision.
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