<p>Top Indian information technology firms Tata Consultancy Services and Infosys have the highest exposure to regional banks in the United States that are gripped by a financial turmoil, analysts at J P Morgan said on Friday.</p>.<p>Regional banks in the United States account for 2-3 Per cent of their revenue, J P Morgan said in a note, adding that the exposure to the recently collapsed Silicon Valley Bank could be 10-20 basis points for TCS, Infosys and smaller rival LTIMindtree, with the Tata group company in the lead.</p>.<p>All three companies might need to set aside provisions in the fourth quarter due to their exposure to SVB, JP Morgan said in a note.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read — <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/oil-unlikely-to-break-above-100/bbl-this-year-j-p-morgan-1192223.html" target="_blank">Oil unlikely to break above $100/bbl this year: J P Morgan</a></strong></p>.<p>"The collapse of SVB, Signature Bank and concerns of liquidity across US and the European Union can further soften tech spends by banks over the short term in a year with slowing growth in bank tech budgets," J.P. Morgan, which has an "underweight" rating on the sector, said.</p>.<p>India's IT industry is already facing a challenging macroeconomic environment in its key markets of Europe and the United States, where technology spending is contracting amid delays in decision-making on long-term deals as the pandemic-led surge in demand faded.</p>.<p>The banking crisis could delay deal ramp-ups, impacting revenue conversions over the next two quarters, and push back new order closures that could hurt revenue over the next four quarters, J.P. Morgan said.</p>.<p>Indian IT firms draw the bulk of their revenue from the banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI) sector.</p>.<p>Within BFSI, their exposure to the US banks is on average 62 Per cent and Europe 23 Per cent, J.P. Morgan said.</p>.<p>LTIMindtree this week said it had negligible exposure to US regional banks, including SVB. </p>
<p>Top Indian information technology firms Tata Consultancy Services and Infosys have the highest exposure to regional banks in the United States that are gripped by a financial turmoil, analysts at J P Morgan said on Friday.</p>.<p>Regional banks in the United States account for 2-3 Per cent of their revenue, J P Morgan said in a note, adding that the exposure to the recently collapsed Silicon Valley Bank could be 10-20 basis points for TCS, Infosys and smaller rival LTIMindtree, with the Tata group company in the lead.</p>.<p>All three companies might need to set aside provisions in the fourth quarter due to their exposure to SVB, JP Morgan said in a note.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read — <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/oil-unlikely-to-break-above-100/bbl-this-year-j-p-morgan-1192223.html" target="_blank">Oil unlikely to break above $100/bbl this year: J P Morgan</a></strong></p>.<p>"The collapse of SVB, Signature Bank and concerns of liquidity across US and the European Union can further soften tech spends by banks over the short term in a year with slowing growth in bank tech budgets," J.P. Morgan, which has an "underweight" rating on the sector, said.</p>.<p>India's IT industry is already facing a challenging macroeconomic environment in its key markets of Europe and the United States, where technology spending is contracting amid delays in decision-making on long-term deals as the pandemic-led surge in demand faded.</p>.<p>The banking crisis could delay deal ramp-ups, impacting revenue conversions over the next two quarters, and push back new order closures that could hurt revenue over the next four quarters, J.P. Morgan said.</p>.<p>Indian IT firms draw the bulk of their revenue from the banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI) sector.</p>.<p>Within BFSI, their exposure to the US banks is on average 62 Per cent and Europe 23 Per cent, J.P. Morgan said.</p>.<p>LTIMindtree this week said it had negligible exposure to US regional banks, including SVB. </p>