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India’s IT shares near three‑year low as OpenAI move revives AI fears

By Thomson Reuters May 12, 2026 | 12:41 AM

May 12 (Reuters) – India’s IT shares fell to a three-year low on Tuesday as investor jitters around the threat posed by artificial intelligence to flagship IT firms flared up again, after OpenAI announced a new AI ​venture.

The Nifty IT index fell 3.6% to its lowest since May 2023, ‌with Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, HCL Technologies and Wipro falling between 2.5% and 4%.

Analysts at HSBC said in a Tuesday note that India’s top-tier IT firms largely failed to meet street expectations for earnings in March quarter as well as in their outlooks for the new financial year, ‌adding that ​strong spending globally on AI could be “crowding out” demand ⁠for traditional IT services.

HSBC’s warning ⁠comes a day after OpenAI said it is launching a new company backed by more than $4 billion, embedding engineers into organizations to identify where AI can make the most impact. It’s the latest challenge to Indian IT firms’ business ​model from a major AI company targeting enterprise clients.

Indian IT stocks are unlikely to attract positive investor interest unless global AI activity, cloud capex growth and cloud ⁠revenue momentum slow, HSBC said.

Indian IT companies derive ⁠a significant share of their revenue from North America and ​are considered sensitive to U.S. economic uncertainty and corporate technology spending trends.

The industry has been ​under pressure for much of 2026, starting with a February rout ‌after the roll-out of Anthropic’s Claude Code and on fears rapid advances in generative AI would disrupt demand for traditional IT and professional services.

India’s IT stocks have slid 25.4% so far this year, making them India’s worst-performing sector, compared with a 9.7% drop ⁠in the benchmark Nifty 50.

March quarter results have done little to soothe investor worries. Dollar revenue at industry bellwether Tata Consultancy Services shrank 0.5% year-on-year to $30 billion for the ⁠year ended March – the first ‌decline since the company’s 2004 IPO.

Industry peers have flagged ⁠challenges of meeting targets with limited visibility on demand: HCL ​Tech’s CEO ‌C Vijayakumar said in the company’s post-earnings investor call it ​took “25%-30% more ⁠effort to convert and get to the same number” in terms of total contract value.

The broader Indian market remained under pressure on Tuesday, with the rupee sliding to a record low on elevated crude oil prices with talks to end the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran finding no success.

(Reporting by Chandini Monnappa, Surbhi Misra and Pranav Kashyap in Bengaluru; ​Editing by Ronojoy Mazumdar)