
Accenture Shares Fall After Muted Outlook Sends Warning to Indian IT:
June 23, 2025 | Global IT giant Accenture Plc. has issued another muted revenue forecast, citing a whirlwind of macroeconomic headwinds that are pushing global clients to scale back technology spending. These developments could spell further challenges for India’s top IT companies, which are already reeling from a weak fiscal start.
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Accenture chair and CEO Julie Sweet described the current environment as historically turbulent. “In every boardroom and every industry, our clients are not facing a single challenge—they are facing everything at once: economic volatility, geopolitical complexity, and major shifts in customer behavior.”
This caution is reflected in the company’s Q4 (March–May) revenue guidance: $17–17.6 billion, lower than the $17.73 billion it posted in Q3, despite recording 6% sequential and 7.7% year-on-year growth.
Several destabilizing factors are weighing on client confidence:
These pressures have led Fortune 500 companies to pause or delay major digital transformation and cloud deals—a concerning sign for India’s top tech firms like TCS, Infosys, Wipro, HCLTech, and Tech Mahindra.
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While core tech spending slows, Generative AI (GenAI) has emerged as a growth engine:
Accenture has become the first global IT firm to quantify GenAI revenues, far surpassing India’s IT firms, which have so far shared little clarity on AI-specific earnings.
“Our clients have moved from pause to focus and leapfrog,” said Julie Sweet, signalling rapid AI adoption despite caution in legacy IT spending.
The ripple effects of Accenture’s subdued outlook may intensify concerns for Indian IT giants, especially as they:
Analyst Keith Bachman (BMO Capital Markets) warned that Accenture is headed into a difficult 2H FY25 given high YoY comparables and a deteriorating macro landscape—a red flag for Indian players operating in the same ecosystem.
While Accenture’s GenAI surge offers a beacon of hope, its guarded tone on broader technology demand should worry Indian IT service providers. With deal momentum fragile and enterprise clients jittery over global politics, India’s $283 billion IT sector must brace for more turbulence ahead—unless it pivots aggressively to future-ready tech like AI, cloud modernization, and cybersecurity.
📌 Tags:
Accenture, Indian IT sector, TCS, Infosys, GenAI, Tech Spending, Julie Sweet, Global Conflicts, Tariffs, Iran-Israel Crisis, Digital Transformation
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