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The IT major had announced the buyback at a 19% premium to its previous closing price of ₹210 on Thursday. But the move did little to enthuse investors, with the stock falling as much as 4% earlier in the day. It ended at ₹204.30, down 2.8%.
Brokerages said that the effective benefit of the share buyback to shareholders could be limited, with the premium translating into less meaningful upsides.
AgenciesStock falls on earnings miss; brokerages flag revenue, margin hit as IT firm lags peers
India’s fourth-largest IT services company posted a 2% decline in consolidated net profit at ₹3,502 crore for the March quarter from the same period a year ago.
Most brokerages struck a cautious note. Goldman Sachs flagged a weaker-than-expected performance and said guidance indicates continued revenue contraction in the near term.
“While Wipro’s margin delivery has been strong, we expect revenue headwinds to translate into a near-term subdued EBIT margin profile,” said the brokerage in a client note. “We see limited signs of Wipro’s revenue underperformance gap closing with peers in the near term, particularly in a subdued macro environment.”
Kotak Institutional Equities said the company continues to lose ground to peers, with deal wins yet to translate into meaningful growth and the gap with competitors remaining wide. “We retain a cautious stance despite cheap valuations, given continued underperformance,” it said.
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https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/stocks/news/even-a-rs-15000-crore-buyback-fails-to-cheer-wipro-investors/articleshow/130345806.cms




