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US job data growth rose in January, signalling a strong labour market that could deter the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates. Lower interest rates are expected to boost demand. But investors’ main concern about the prospects of IT companies remains the advancement of AI technologies.
“Rapid developments in AI have created uncertainty among investors, which is weighing on sentiment for traditional IT stocks,” said Sumit Pokharna, vice-president, Fundamental Research at Kotak Securities.
The index had dropped 5.9% on February 4 after San Francisco-based AI company Anthropic announced Claude Cowork, an open-source plugin designed to automate tasks across legal, sales, marketing and data analysis. That fall erased ₹1.9 lakh crore in market value from the Indian IT pack on a single day.
Vikas Gupta, CEO at OmniScience Capital, said the industry has long understood AI’s productivity potential, but Anthropic’s latest announcement has highlighted its disruptive impact for stock-market investors, triggering fresh fears.
Gupta said even as demand for digital services rises and AI investments may reach $2-3 trillion over the next five years, IT services are unlikely to be disrupted overnight. “We expect IT companies to now pivot towards enabling AI adoption for non-tech companies. But this transition may take time, keeping growth uncertain,” he said.
Agencies Valuations: No Comfort
Gupta said Indian IT stocks were trading at premium valuations of 20-30 times price-to-earnings (P/E) despite near-term revenue growth expectations of just 2-4%.
“Even after this correction, we remain cautious until valuations in the sector become more attractive,” he said. Pokharna said while valuations have moderated, he sees scope for better entry points in the near term and remains optimistic on the sector’s medium- to long-term prospects.
“We believe the recent sell-off may be somewhat overdone, as not all expectations from new technologies materialise immediately, and Indian IT companies are likely to adapt over time,” he said. Most large- and mid-cap IT stocks have seen a build-up of bearish positions amid the recent sell-off, said Rajesh Palviya, head of technical and derivatives research at Axis Securities. Now, the Nifty IT index, which closed at 33,160 on Thursday, is near a key support zone.
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https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/stocks/news/it-stocks-go-into-a-tailspin-as-us-data-adds-to-ai-disruption/articleshow/128281389.cms




