L&T Technology Services Limited (NSE:LTTS)
3,755.00
+48.30 (1.30%)
May 5, 2026, 3:30 PM IST
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Q2 25/26
Oct 17, 2025
Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the Q2 FY26 conference call of L&T Technology Services Limited. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during this conference, please signal an operator by pressing star and then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Sandesh Naik, Head of Investor Relations. Thank you, and over to you, Mr. Naik.
Thank you, Dovan. Good evening. Wishing you and your family a very happy Diwali. I am Sandesh and welcome you all to the earnings call of L&T Technology Services Amit Chadha for the second quarter of FY26. Our financial results, investor release, and press release have been filed on the stock exchanges and are also available on our website, www.ltts.com. I hope you had a chance to go through them. This call is for 60 minutes. We will try to wrap up the management remarks in 20 minutes and then open up for Q&A. The audio recording of this call will be available on our website one hour after the call ends. With that, let me introduce you to the leadership team present on this call. We have with us Amit Chadha, CEO and MD; Alind Saxena, Executive Director and President; and Rajeev Gupta, CFO.
We will begin with Amit providing an overview of the company performance and outlook, followed by Rajeev, who will walk you through the financial performance. I now invite Amit for his opening remarks.
Thank you, Sandesh. I would like to actually thank you so much for joining the call today and would like to wish you and all your families a very happy Diwali. We celebrated Diwali early with a near $300 million large deal TCV intake in Q2. I am happy to see our go deeper to scale and multi-segment strategy leading to deeper engagements with our global clients and a strong order book in spite of the current market dynamics and geopolitical unpredictability. Let me provide the highlights for our Q2 performance. Revenue in USD constant currency terms grew by 1.3% sequentially and 10.4% annually, with the Sustainability segment achieving double-digit annual growth for two quarters consecutively and Tech segment remaining resilient. Business in both U.S. and Europe continued to expand steadily, showing consistent growth on a sequential and annual basis.
Our strong momentum of deal wins continued as we touched a record high large deal TCV of $292 million this quarter, including a $100 million and a $60 million deal. The EBIT margins are slightly better at 13.4% for the quarter. We expect both revenue and EBIT margins to see an improvement in the second half of FY26, with H2 growth better than H1. Before diving into segments, I want to share some updates about our technology and innovation charter. We have filed 216 patents in AI and GenAI alone, while our overall patent count has exceeded the 1,600 mark this quarter. We established a strong leadership position in engineering and industrial AI offerings, which is helping us gain client mindshare and market share. We launched our AI-first delivery model and continue to make targeted investments to make the workforce ready in GenAI, Agentic AI, and Physical AI.
Physical AI for us includes multimodal AI, AI reasoning, and edge AI. We scaled our AI portfolio with platforms like QGuard.ai, FusionWorld.ai, PlexAI, AI Nexus, GenIQ, and TrackEI to drive automation, contextual intelligence, and real-life world machine applications. For example, our proprietary AI framework, PlexAI, has already been deployed across 36 use cases, accelerating innovation by embedding intelligence throughout the product lifecycle. QGuard.ai and FusionWorld.ai are enabling synchronized scalable workflows, while GenIQ and AI Nexus are powering intelligent decision-making across engineering processes. These platforms are seeing strong client traction and early monetization. About 1% of our trailing 12 months revenue has come from licensed revenue of these products, including AI, and our goal is to expand this to 5% of trailing 12 months revenue in the medium term.
We are also making strategic investments in humanoids for our manufacturing environment, with use cases focused on repetitive, precision-driven tasks, a clear step forward in our vision of autonomous intelligent factories. Our partnership with Sema.ai, Vidya, and MIT Media Labs further strengthens our AI backbone, ensuring we remain future-ready. Let me now provide details on our segmental performance and outlook. In Mobility, our trucks and off-highway subsegment did well and grew sequentially, while the aero and rail subsegment was resilient. The auto subsegment remained subdued due to continued program pauses and muted decision-making. Let me provide some color. In auto, our clients are reviewing model year choices, and we believe some certainty will emerge in the next three months. Clients' spending on local manufacturing and supply chain continues to be resilient. We are also actively participating in consolidation deals in the U.S. and Europe.
This quarter, we saw an uptick in clients wanting to use our proprietary EV platform, LTTS iDrive Solution for SDV, and TrackEI for specific OEM programs. In TNOH, we are seeing continued investments from customers as they roll out new products with new features, leveraging AI and automation. One of our $20 million wins is in this area. The pipeline remains active with multiple conversations in auto, TNOH, aero, and rail. We continue to work with our clients to get this to closure. The Mobility segment will be muted with cyclical impact due to furloughs in the coming quarter, Q3, and we expect a comeback in Q4 FY26. Coming to Sustainability, the Sustainability segment continued to perform well, delivering 3% sequential growth and 12.6% annual growth, reflecting steady demand, execution strength, and ramping up of large deal closures from the previous quarters.
In Q2, we had two significant achievements in this segment. One, we achieved a $50 million account on an annualized run rate basis in the plant engineering subsegment. If you will recall, this is the same account where we had announced a large deal of $100 million some two to three years ago. Secondly, we closed the quarter with our largest ever deal of $100 million in the industrial subsegment. A very proud moment for all of us and vindication of our being number one in this area. Now, let me provide some color. The industrial subsegment has been digital and has seen digital and AI-led interventions across the PDLC offering to our clients. We are ramping up large deals signed and continue to see deal wins with a robust pipeline ahead. On the $100 million deal, we are leveraging our AI portfolio.
We will support the client across new product development, substance engineering, value engineering, and platform automation. Our partnership with Tennant for sustainable product development continues to ramp up with the setup of a dedicated offshore engineering center. In plant engineering, demand continues across ONG and CPG for greenfield, brownfield, and CapEx projects and ongoing spend on digitization and modernization of legacy plants. We were chosen by a global food and beverage company for a greenfield project in plant design, process, and utility engineering, while in another large deal, a global beverage major has engaged us for end-to-end execution of their machine safety program across several global sites. Key clients continue to ramp up as demonstrated by the $50 million account mentioned earlier. For the Sustainability segment, we expect the growth momentum and large deal wins to continue in both industrial and plant subsegments. Now on to Tech.
The Tech segment, while continuing remaining resilient for the quarter, grew 28.6% annually as it included the benefits of IntelliSwift revenue over the previous year. The software and platform subsegment, along with integration of IntelliSwift, is making strides with the Agentic AI offerings and data engineering platform. This has led to a good industry response with a notable deal win to build a data factory model for a healthcare client in the pharma area, which again is a new entry for us as an area. The media and Tech subsegment is rapidly evolving with significant transformations driven by AI and immersive technologies. We continue to grow in the U.S. and have seen steady growth in our semiconductor accounts. This quarter saw us win a significant deal with a U.S.-based telecom infrastructure major to deliver advanced network software development and application engineering solutions.
In the medtech, this again was leveraging the SmartWorld telecom infrastructure piece that we had got some years ago. In the medtech subsegment, we are seeing healthy demand from Europe and Japan, while seeing some delay in ramp-ups in a few programs in the U.S. market. A new client in the ophthalmology space has selected L&T Technology Services for the only technology partner for their program in lifecycle engineering and new product development. This will help us in our growth going ahead. We expect medtech to grow in the second half of the year, leveraging AI solutions across digital manufacturing, sustenance, engineering, and quality. In the Tech segment, various large deals in advanced stages of negotiation will help us continue Tech's growth trajectory in the second half of the year.
Overall, we are seeing client decisions being made and anticipate a strong growth trajectory across all three segments in Q4 and beyond. Before I come to the outlook, I would like to highlight our readiness and strengthening of processes and teams to build the company for the next level of growth. First, as mentioned earlier, we are pivoting to an AI-first delivery model, service offering model, creating and selling new offerings, taking a frontal position in AI in engineering, industrial, and physical AI. Second, strengthening leadership and organization depth is important. We have a robust succession planning mechanism and have re-energized our leadership team with the addition of three new segment heads in the last quarter. This was as some of the current leaders retired. Joining us from global MNCs, these leaders have already taken charge of the Mobility segment, the medtech subsegment, and the media tech segment.
We have also hired a new global large deals head to be based on the East Coast of the U.S. to bolster the large deal engine. Of the four leaders, three are based in the U.S. and all of them have spent between two to three decades in the technology services industry. These appointments strengthen our delivery and operational depth across horizontal sub-verticals and technology. Similarly, augmenting of leadership done last year in the Sustainability segment have reaped beneficial results in the plant engineering and industrial product subsegments. Lastly, focus on profitable sustainable growth. Our focus remains clear to prepare L&T Technology Services for the next phase of growth, doubling down on areas that are value accretive while proactively pruning those that are not. This efficiency focus will continue reinforcing our commitment to sustainable margin improvement and shareholder value creation. With that, let me discuss the outlook.
The macro environment has remained similar to Q1. However, we have observed revival in deal-related conversations across all subsegments except automotive. We recognize that FY26 may be a tight year, but the long-term fundamentals remain robust. The changing spends on AI, softwarization of products and services, and ongoing reindustrialization of the U.S. are creating opportunities for L&T Technology Services to lead with engineering and AI innovation. We believe we are well positioned to capitalize on the shift. With a strong order book and large deal wins, we aspire for double-digit growth in FY26 and reiterate a medium-term outlook of $2 billion. With that said, I would like to thank all of you. I'm going to stay on for the questions, and I would like to hand over the call to Rajeev.
Thank you, Amit. Good evening, everyone. First of all, I wish you and your families a very happy Diwali and prosperous New Year in advance. Let me begin with the key highlights for quarter two, FY26. Our diversification strategy, early investments in AI, and new age technologies, coupled with deep relationships with clients, have led to the highest ever large deal wins of about $300 million in the quarter, including a $100 million deal win in Sustainability segment and a $60 million win in Tech segment. We are indeed seeing fructification in our strategy of having $100 million, $50 million accounts. Pleased to share that we now have a $50 million account in Sustainability segment on an annualized run rate basis in quarter two, FY26. Quarter two, FY26 saw an improvement in performance across the board: deal wins, revenue growth, margins, and cash flows.
This is in line with our earlier commentary. With that, let me take you through quarter two financials, starting with the P&L. Our revenue for the quarter was INR 2,980 crores, a growth of 15.8% on a year-on-year basis, and a growth of 4% on a sequential basis. EBIT margin for the quarter came to 13.4%, a slight improvement over the previous quarter. We expect margins to show improvement from year on. Moving to below EBIT, to start with other income, was at INR 50 crores, marginally lower on a sequential basis. Our effective tax rate for quarter two was 26.5%. That's an improvement of 40 bps from the previous quarter. With that, we have now reduced our expected range for the tax rate between 26.5% to 27%. Our net income for the quarter was INR 328.7 crores, up 4.1% on a sequential basis, which is 11% of revenue.
Moving to the balance sheet to highlight key line items, the combined DSO, including unbilled, stood at 114 days compared to 116 days in quarter one, a reduction of two days. Q2 DSO was at 94 days compared to 98 days in Q1. Unbilled days were at 20 days in Q2 compared to 17 days in Q1. The combined DSO is within the target range of 110 to 115 days, and we expect to improve as the year progresses. Our Q2 free cash flows came in on a healthy INR 445 crores, leading to a year-to-date free cash flow of INR 417 crores. Our cash and investments stood at INR 2,883 crores at the end of quarter two versus INR 2,431 crores at the end of quarter one. As you would have seen, the board approved an interim dividend of INR 18 per share.
Moving to revenue metrics, in dollar terms, we reported a revenue of $337 million as compared to $335 million in Q1, a growth of 1.3% sequentially and 10.4% year-on-year on a constant currency basis. Talking about segment margin performance for quarter two, FY26, Mobility segment margins for Q2 came in at 14.8%, lower compared to the previous quarter due to a subdued demand environment in the automotive sector. Amit already highlighted our overall Mobility segment is balancing out with growth in truck and off-highways and aero and rail subsegments. We see the automotive sector stabilizing going ahead and expect the Mobility segment to return to growth and better margins in quarter four, FY26. Sustainability segment margins for Q2 came in at 28.1% margins, up 50 basis over the previous quarter, resulting from a ramp-up of large deal wins.
Further, large deal wins of $100 million in Q2 and a healthy pipeline in this segment will continue to aid revenue growth and margin improvement going ahead. Tech segment margins for the quarter came in at 9%, remaining stable compared to the previous quarter. Our integration plan for IntelliSwift acquisition continues to show results with improvement in margins sequentially. Let me now comment on operational metrics. The onsite offshore mix showed slight improvement towards offshore as compared to Q1. Offshore percentage now stands at 56.4%. The TNM revenue mix was 61.9% in Q2, lower compared to Q1. Client profile, which indicated a number of million-dollar-plus accounts, has shown sequential improvement in the $30 million and $1 million category. The client profile will continue to improve in the coming quarters. Client contribution to revenue is quite similar compared to Q1 across categories.
We expect revenue from top customers to improve going forward as we are running targeted programs on client mining. Headcount for 2023 was 23,678 in quarter two compared to 23,626 in Q1, while attrition remained at similar levels as compared to Q1. Realized Rupee for Q2 was at INR 88.39 to the dollar, a depreciation of around 3.4% versus Q1 when compared to INR. As I conclude, let me provide visibility on the margin trajectory going forward. We have seen margins improve sequentially in Q2, FY26, and we'll see further improvement from year on. Improvement in margins will be facilitated by growth, improvement in the quality of revenue, and segment mix, with higher large deal wins in our highest profitable segment, Sustainability. That's the first that we see.
The second, operational efficiency such as optimization of pyramid, leveraging AI, and automation in project delivery, review of low margin portfolio and tail accounts, higher offshoring, and optimization of G&A costs are going to further help us in terms of improving margins. Thirdly, the integration plan for IntelliSwift acquisition continues to yield incremental improvement as we move sequentially and quarter on quarter. Launch of our internal AI platform to leverage AI across our functions: delivery, HR, finance, marketing, IT will deliver efficiencies and also aid in terms of margin improvement. All of this will lead to H2 FY26 margins to be better than H1 FY26 margins. With that, we maintain our aspirations of mid-16% EBIT margins between quarter four, FY27, and quarter one, FY28. Thank you. I now hand it over to the moderator for questions.
Thank you very much. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touch-tone telephone. If you wish to withdraw yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to please use handsets while asking a question. We also request that you please limit yourselves to two questions only. For further questions, you may rejoin the question queue. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. Our first question comes from the line of Ravi Menon from Macquarie. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. Congrats on really good deal wins. I want to check about the growth across geographies. It looks like the core geographies are doing well. America and Europe have grown. Even India has grown. The rest of the world has seen a decline. Should we think about that, correlate that with the challenges in automotive?
No, I would necessarily not do that. See, the way to look at it is that there are businesses in ROW that we did decide that we will look at as small. I would not worry. Basically, our strong geographies are US, Europe, as well as Japan, actually, have grown and done well. That's where it is.
Any progress on taking SmartWorld to the Middle East?
That is where we've been working on. We have been getting some. We have got a pipeline in the Middle East that we are working on, but it is taking longer than what we had expected in terms of closures in the Middle East. In fact, we've got some good inquiries for SmartWorld in the U.S. as well, again going slower than what we had anticipated.
Thank you. One last thing. You had started a cybersecurity center in the U.S. Is that something that can leverage the credentials of SmartWorld Communications in India?
If you go look at SmartWorld, there were three parts to it. There was a smart cities piece, there was a telecom infrastructure piece, and there was a cyber piece. Broadly, if I recall, about 65%, 60% was cities, about 40-odd percent, 35%, 38% was infrastructure, telco infrastructure, and the remaining was the cyber, very small. Cyber now, I can confirm, is in excess of, I would say, at a company level, we have been able to take it about between 1% and 2.5% of our revenues and fairly profitable. The telco infrastructure piece is anyway international. In fact, this large deal win that we had with the telecom operator was from that area. Because of the credentials, smart cities continue to be, like I talked, a little down.
Thanks so much, Ravi Kala. The $100 million in Sustainability, just to confirm, this is the largest deal win that you've had in this segment, right?
This is the largest deal we have had in this segment. If I recall, we had a deal that was $100 million in the oil and gas space. It was, I think, about four years ago or five years ago. That was that. Now the $100 million in Sustainability. In IP, this is the first $100 million deal. No rebadging, all offshore, largely offshore, a little bit of onsite, in line with the Sustainability margins.
All right. Thanks so much, Sandesh.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Bhavik Mehta from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you. A couple of questions. Firstly, on the auto vertical, we do expect a recovery from 4Q. How should we think about the pace of recovery over the course of, let's just say, 2026? Is there something where you expect a gradual recovery, or there could be some pent-up demand because of it, the recovery could be faster?
Yeah. First, I'm an optimist, right? For those that have met me would agree with that. See, here's what I'm seeing in the market. There's a certain certainty that has come into the decision-making in the last couple of months where we're seeing people accept the new normal and start to make decisions for their business, for their customers, for their products, re-shoring of manufacturing starting up. I'm not saying production has started, but permits are being built, taken up, etc. I'm seeing that happen for sure. Second, AI in enterprise, there's a lot of use cases, but AI in manufacturing and engineering is also picking up steadily. In fact, every board is asking our Head of Engineering or Head of Product Development, our CTOs, "Have you used AI and where?" It's coming top-down.
Those two are, in my view, some very strong signs that stuff will start to pick up pace right about February timeframe because, you know, October, November, December is a furlough quarter. We'll see how it goes. It's not a washout, but we'll see. I mean, we have to grow, right? That will be there. There is also a lot of consolidation deals going on. There are companies in Western and Eastern Europe that are getting consolidated against because their skill sets don't match the latest skill sets needed. A lot of activity going on, I would say. I do hope that I think that Feb onwards will be higher growth than current year growth has been. I hope I've answered your question.
That's helpful. Thank you for that. The other question is the last DT, what we are reporting, you know, the $200 million it was trending last three quarters, gone up to $300 million now. Is this entirely net new or does it include an element of renewals also? Because if the renewals are also included, then you know what is the ratio of net new over the past few quarters trending?
Yeah. One thing, about 20% would be what was already there, and 80% broadly is what we have built on as add-on new. That's how you should look at it.
Okay. Got it. That's it from my side. Thank you.
One more point just to answer that. Most of the deals we are getting when we are announcing a TCV $10 million plus, it is a plus-plus. It is not just a renewal. I'm just making sure that you understand that.
Right, right. Got it. Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Karan Upal from Philip Capital, India. Please go ahead.
Thank you for the opportunity. Just a question on the TCV to revenue conversion. LTTS has been reporting very strong TCV since the last four quarters, but the growth has been a bit softened in the last couple of quarters. From here on, how do you think about the TCV to revenue conversion? Your commentary suggests that the revenue conversion is improving. Do you think that the clients are now more open to spending now versus, let's say, six months back? That's the first question.
Sure. To answer your first question, broadly, if you look at it, our wins used to be in the $100 million range, and they have jumped to $200 million for the last four quarters, including this quarter. If you look at Sustainability, we had announced a deal that was $70+ million in quarter four, and there was one big one that we did in Sustainability. You've seen that Sustainability is growing, right? I would say that the way to think about it is that auto has been subdued. Like I said, program pauses have continued and subdued. Otherwise, you would have seen this come out full potential in terms of the growth. We're working on it, and I do believe the ratio will be better than H1.
Okay. Amit, last time you mentioned that for FY2026, organic growth would be better than last year. Do you still hold to that guidance?
I said double-digit, hold to that.
Okay.
We also.
One question.
Be aware. No, good you're asking it. Look, we've always been very honest and transparent. You should be aware that we continue to look at the portfolio and see if there is stuff that's really dragging us down, non-strategic. We try and avoid doing such stuff because you want to maintain market dominance in the areas we operate. The way to look at it is that, like I said, Feb onwards, I do expect. I'm not saying that nothing will happen in quarter three. I'm confirming H2 better than H1. I'm also not saying it's going to be hockey stick Q3 to Q4. There will be growth, but I can see clear signs of the burst coming Feb onwards.
Okay. Thanks. Thanks for that clarification. One question for Rajeev, just a bookkeeping one. Depreciation has been rising for three quarters post IntelliSwift acquisition. How much should we bake in from a go-forward perspective?
What I would guide is, this quarter we did have capitalization of one of the facilities that we've set up in Baroda. That's a dedicated facility for L&T Technology Services Limited. There is indeed an increase in depreciation on account of that. You should model depreciation in the range of INR 95 crore in a quarter.
Okay, cool. Thanks and all the best.
Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Manik Taneja from Axis Capital. Please go ahead.
Thank you for the opportunity. I wanted to check with you on a couple of things. First of all, on the high-tech side, if you could break your commentary in terms of what are you seeing within your heritage portfolio, the IntelliSwift portfolio, and SWC. That's question number one. The second question is that at the start of this year, you had supported certain strategic customers through certain price or volume discounts, which have been a headwind to margins in the more recent quarters. You were expecting them to essentially go away from sometime in the second quarter and thereby margins expected to improve. Are we on track on that? The third one essentially is on wage hikes for the year. If you could give us a few thoughts on the theme. Thank you.
Let me start with the third question. Wage hikes are in consideration. We are working on it. It will be either sometime in Q3 or sometime in Q4. It is a decision to be made, and we are working through it. We are committed to doing it in one of the quarters. You know last time we had done it in November of last year. We are working on it. Please give us a little time on that as we go through stuff, right? Either quarter three or quarter four, we will do it. Now, in terms of client support, happy to report that the client support has ended as of quarter two end. Rajeev can add more color, but the margins will improve from here on, like we have said. Let me go to the heritage portfolio, etc., on Tech. Start with SmartWorld.
SmartWorld, smart cities, we are not seeing a lot of traction. For telco, infra part of it and cyber are doing okay for us, growing. We are being very picky and choosy on the jobs that we pick up in SmartWorld because we are careful about the margins that we operate under. Middle East is something we have invested in a sales team. U.S., we have invested in a sales team. There are active deals. We had closed one earlier. We've executed it. Others we are working on to try and do that. There is an active pipeline that we continue to work. Very honestly, I would have expected this to be faster. It hasn't panned out at the pace that we had expected. Now, going on to IntelliSwift. IntelliSwift, we had picked up at X margins, and we had committed to you we will grow the margins.
I can confirm to you the IntelliSwift margins standalone have grown also quarter on quarter. Now, in terms of the heritage business that we have, plus, we are actively talking to grow accounts. In fact, three accounts that are hyperscalers are $30 million plus accounts for us. We've been posting stuff on LinkedIn also. You can look at it. A lot of excitement that we have created around some accounts. If you go to the heritage business, which was media tech, semiconductor, and some of the medical areas, we have won the $60 million account that was in the telecom place. Done okay. There are certain areas which we are looking at reducing there because some of the work that we've got is non-strategic. We look at it. Largely growing. We had had another win on telecom infrastructure last quarter, if you remember, and telecom infrastructure this quarter as well.
Growing, right? Medical has been a little slow in the U.S. for us. We have won some very interesting programs in Japan. We won a good, very nice program client in ophthalmology. Very excited about it. Happy to share that now we have a near $50 million account in medical. We also have two $10 million plus accounts in medical that are really promising, and some of them, three actually. We have others that are sub $10 million, above $5 million. We do believe the change of approach with a new segment leader, along with a dedicated sales team that's been reorganized, will help us bring growth back in this, say, from Q4.
Great.
I hope I have answered your question.
No, that's quite helpful. Just one clarification. Your outlook on margins probably will stay respective of the wage hike that are yet to essentially be decided upon. Will that probably be an incremental headwind for our margins in the near term?
Rajeev, let me add to that. Amit already mentioned the fact that, look, this is in consideration and a lot of factors being evaluated at this stage. It will be an event either in Q3 or Q4. Whenever that decision is being made, our commentary around H2 margins being better than H1 continues, right? We will be able to absorb the headwinds that come from wage hikes.
Great. Thank you and all the best for the future.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Vibhore Singhal from Nuvama Equities. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for taking my questions. Congrats on very solid deal wins. Amit, my question is on the deal wins again. I think we have seen very strong deal wins. Gradually, I think every quarter we are just upping the benchmark in terms of the deal win quantum that we are reporting. I just wanted to understand two parts to this question here. One is, of course, is it merely because we've become bigger and we've basically been able to get more kind of capabilities under our belt that we are able to win these kind of large deals? Is it something different that we are doing? Secondly, is it somehow also a reflection of how the ER&D industry has evolved that now we are seeing the kind of deals that we had never seen before? Maybe we'll probably see more of such large deals going forward also.
Sure. Thank you so much for that question. Number one, what has changed for us is that instead of one central sales organization, we now have six sales teams in the U.S. across the six segments, plus a regional sales team in Europe, in India, Middle East, Japan, and Australia, right, ROW. That's number one. We've created a lot more capillary forces here. Second is that we've been investing in technology, I believe, at times ahead of the curve. Filing those 216 patents in AI is a signal of that. Getting like 1% of trailing 12 months of revenue is not a lot, but it's an indication that we are on the right path from license sales. Most of them, AI license sales, is a good indication that the technology we are ahead.
Third is the type of conversations we are able to have with our customers actually involves the CTO, involves the Head of Product Development, involves the Head of Manufacturing, includes at times the CIO for the manufacturing part, is helping us in mapping up larger areas and picking up more areas than we did earlier. Fourth, as a practice, earlier we would go and we would pick up an order for $1 million, we happy to come away. Now we ask the question, if you're giving me a $1 million PO, can you give me a three-year SOW? There's some certainty to the demand. What we are building is we are building steps to the future that some of this TCV will. This $100 million win is not across two years. This $100 million win is across five-plus years, right? The $60 million win is a five-year win.
The point is the duration, we are trying to increase the duration. We are not doing 10 years. We are not doing 20 years. The highest we have done is seven and a half years for a deal. The whole idea is try and get three-digit approvals and wait for that to work out. That's the large intent that we have got. Net-net, more sales penetration. Second, pre-investment in technology. Third, mapping further areas. Fifth is getting into the larger terms. Sixth is, and I do want to make a point, many years ago, we didn't have automotive when we started. We invested in it. We got into it. Four years ago, some of you gave us feedback that you are working with tier ones. In automotive, you don't work with OEMs.
Today, 80% of the work in automotive, 85% actually, is coming from OEMs: West Coast OEMs, East Coast OEMs, Midwest OEMs, Europe OEMs, Japan OEMs. Similarly, you had given us feedback that you are not focused on tech. You're not looking at hyperscalers. Today, three hyperscalers are $25 million plus accounts for us. We continue to learn from you, we learn from others, we learn from our customers, and we continue to grow. That is helping us, if you ask me, in this TCV. I also want to tell you, because somebody will ask the next question, "Will Q3 also have $300 million win?" I'm telling you right now, Q3, I'm confirming $200 million. Still, we will try the $200 million. Let me work, let me walk. I'm walking right now at $200 million. God was kind, Diwali was there, we got $300 million.
Maybe Christmas also we'll get $300 million. We will see.
That's really encouraging to hear. Is it fair to say that maybe clients are also now okay to award slightly longer duration deals? Are clients also okay to award a, what should I say, a multifaceted deal? As you mentioned, you start with the CTO and production engineering head and multiple. Earlier, I think most of the deals in the R&D used to be with a specific segment and then maybe used to cross-sell. Now, at the time of inception of the deal itself, you're able to stitch together multiple departments. Is that a change that is happening in the industry gradually?
What's happening for sure is that clients are also starting to have larger conversations, have the appetite to have larger conversations. In fact, a lot of our client conversations today are happening in our clients, some of our clients, "Can you come and sit down with me and tell me strategically, I'm trying to think about engineering for the next 10 years. As I look at engineering and technology for the next 10 years, what should I do in-house? What should I take out? How should I reskill my people?" Right? Those are the larger conversations we are having and much more meaningful than, "Give me 10 bodies and give me one horse and go away.
Got it. That is great to hear. Just one last question for Rajeev. Rajeev, this quarter would have seen a good amount of, let's say, margin tailwind from currency depreciation. I mean, despite that, we saw only 10 bps of margin expansion on a sequential basis. Any margin work that you would provide as to where how much was the currency benefit in the margins and where was it consumed?
Vibhor, the way I would try to explain this is, see, there is, of course, a tailwind coming from FX. What you also see are the headwinds that are coming from the auto subsegment of Mobility, right? I will request you to talk more to Sandesh on the specifics. If you really put it together, that's where it is. Hence, you're seeing just about a 10 bps improvement. Having said that, I've already called about the fact that, look, whatever strategic support that we are offering to our customers between quarter four, quarter one concludes in quarter two, right? Going forward from quarter three, we should see improvement in margins. Of course, FX continuing should be a further tailwind for us. That's where we are, Vibhor.
Got it. The mid-16.5%, mid-16% margin guidance by Q4 or Q1 FY2027/2028, that you see, you're confident about?
Yes, absolutely, Vibhor.
Perfect. Great. Thank you so much. Thanks for taking my questions, guys, and wish you all the best.
Thanks.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Nithin Padmanabhan from Investech. Please go ahead. Nithin Padmanabhan, your line has been unmuted. You may proceed with your question. As we're not receiving a response from the current participant, we will move to the next participant. Our next question comes from the line of Sandeep Shah from Equiris Securities. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Thanks for the opportunity. Amit, you also mentioned in your opening remarks in the U.S. reindustrialization is an emerging opportunity. I'm asking a question because some parts of the tariff-related announcement are still changing period after period. In this kind of a scenario, clients are in decisive mode. I just wanted to understand the nature of this demand, especially in the U.S.
Sure. See, what we are seeing is that, to start with, when the tariffs got announced and the whole thing was being negotiated, our clients built a lot of what-if-then-else scenarios, right? Which included either changing the supplier, moving supply from Mexico to the U.S., China to the U.S., looking at India, looking at other places. We saw all those scenarios, and they consulted with us. They consulted with others in that area. What we've seen in the last two months is some of those people have come up with those decisions that irrespective of what gets announced further, let's make this move and do XYZ. Specifically, we are seeing discrete manufacturing being set up or factories being expanded or starting to get expanded, plans being done in that area clearly. Second, we are seeing in medical and pharma people actively looking at doing stuff in the U.S. itself.
There is some amount of high-end electronics that people are talking about. I would actually request you, why don't you look at the sales of people like Siemens, ABB, Hitachi, and all these guys in the industrial automation demand that they are reporting, that is sales, new sales that are happening in the U.S. and Europe. You will realize that all of this is going into some of these newer plants, refurbished plants that are happening. Am I saying production has gone up drastically? No. What I'm saying is the plans are being activated. There's a lot more kind of certainty in that area that people are developing.
Thanks. Thanks for the detailed answer. Helpful. Just a couple of follow-ups. In terms of IntelliSwift, you mentioned that the margins have gone up. Is it the revenue trajectory is also moving up on a Q1Q basis?
Rajeev here, let me take the question. There are both the aspects, right? One, of course, the revenue growth because we definitely see opportunities on the software platform side working with the hyperscalers and also the adjacency that we talked around in terms of healthcare. The other is on the margin. We had talked about the integration plan, and we had called out that, look, you know we have an opportunity in terms of the margin improvement at the project level. We also have an opportunity in terms of rationalizing the SG&A costs, right? If you really see in quarter two, there's about 50 bps of improvement. That's actually 40 to 50 bps improvement that's coming on the SG&A costs. Indeed, some of the plans are translating. It's not only the revenue part, but also the integration plan that's working through.
Likely, we will see that, look, you know a few more quarters, we should have IntelliSwift get to what used to be Tech segment-like margins, which is where you know we probably will conclude because essentially, we want to grow the business. We want to invest in the business so that we are able to tap into the opportunity. That is where the hyperscalers are.
Thank you. Thanks. Sir, just a last question in terms of the guidance on double-digit. My calculation implies 3% growth. I understand fourth quarter seasonality strength generally comes through SmartWorld. In the third quarter, don't you believe furlough can have an impact in terms of achieving this kind of an ask rate in Q3, Q4? Q4, just a question whether SmartWorld seasonality may continue even in this year.
To be played out for a year, for the half year, lots of stuff in progress, action. We'll see where it ends up.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Nithin Padmanabhan from Investech. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good evening. Thanks for the opportunity again. I hope I'm audible this time.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah. Perfect. Just wanted your thoughts on the fact that, see, the last three quarters, including this, the fourth quarter, we have had deals consistently about $200 million. Now, if you look at the revenue accretion, could you contextualize that? Has some of that not ramped up or been pushed out, or they have been ramped up and just it's sort of replaced the leakages on the book? I'm just trying to understand if you have a rising backlog, or is it that it just made up for the leakage?
Look, the order book has grown. The backlog has grown definitely. In engineering, the ramp-ups, unless you're doing a rebadge, there's a gradual ramp-up. For example, the $100 million win that we had almost five years ago in the oil and gas customer continued to grow with us. They finished that $100 million, gave us more. Now it's become a $50 million ERR account for us, second quarter in a row. It takes a little time for these to become $50 million accounts, $30 million accounts, all that. When you look at $200 million, don't say, I mean, the average of that $200 million is approximately between four odd years that you have got, right? That's how you manage that. If you do the math, it then goes to order backlog, and there's a ramp-up that's a little slow. Mobility has been a challenge.
If you remember, the last two quarters, I've been saying that mobility has not grown for us. Some of the accounts have ramped down. There have been program pauses. We believe it'll come back. My belief is Feb, March, it'll come back. That's where that is. That's the reason you're not seeing it directly totally drop down and show up. If I may, if you look at the margins also, we had some client support to be provided in the last two quarters. Now that that is gone, you'll see that come into the margins. Give us a little time, work with us. I'm actually excited that we are able to get to this number of TCV wins. We'll continue to push on this and then revenue realization. Thank you.
That's actually quite encouraging from a deal win improvement perspective. Thanks for that. On the margins, this client support, what do you think we should be penciling in in terms of recovery in margins in the second half broadly? How should we think about it?
Nithin, this is Rajeev here. I already mentioned it earlier. I'm not sure if you're able to hear me out. The strategic support that we had called out between quarter four FY25 and quarter one and quarter two of FY26 comes to a conclusion in this quarter, right? We are not anymore carrying that forward. We've also said that our H2 margins will be better than H1. That begins with quarter three itself. We haven't given a specific number so far on the margin for the year. We've definitely given clarity that we will come back to mid-16% levels by quarter four or quarter one FY28. Yes, the margins will improve from year on, though we have not put a number for the year given, of course, all the headwinds that we saw between Q1 and Q2. I think the worst is behind us now.
Perfect. That's helpful, Rajeev. Thanks a ton and all the very best.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Pratik Maheshwari from HSBC Securities. Please go ahead.
Hello. Thank you for the opportunity. Amit, I have a question. I just wanted you guys to double-click on the outlook for Mobility. You guys expect probably furloughs in 3Q, but growth from 4Q onwards. I wanted to understand if you guys also think that probably automotive could also turn to growth by that timeline. Would it be just because of highway, railways, and trucks?
Can you just repeat this question, please?
Amit, I wanted to understand. Your guidance is basically Mobility would turn to growth by the fourth quarter. I just wanted to understand, probably if you can give it subsegment-wise, what do you think about automotive in that? Would it be just based on the ramp-ups that you're seeing with highway trucks and railways?
All in?
Yeah.
As you're aware, mobility for us is three parts. We talk about automotive, we talk about trucks and off-highway, and we talk about aero and rail. If we look at how this quarter played out, we actually grew in the other sectors, and automotive was quiet. We expect Q4 to come back with growth in automotive itself. We are seeing deals starting to ramp up that we had closed earlier, and we had talked about they took a little bit of time, but now we are seeing that happen. This is cross-borders. We are fairly confident that unless something happens dramatically different in the next few months in Q3, we should see a good amount of growth coming across all the three sectors that we have in mobility.
Thank you. One question I had for Rajeev. I just wanted to understand on the SG&A. How much of a target reduction is there with the IntelliSwift integration?
Pratik, wouldn't be able to put a number to that, but I can give you an overall view in terms of where we see the SG&A for L&T Technology Services to finally arrive at. Prior to the IntelliSwift acquisition, I had mentioned that our then target range used to be between 10.5% to 11%, right? At this point in time, we are at about 11.5%. We'll continue to work upon this because we are also conscious that with the opportunity that might come ahead of us, we will invest in sales. SG&A, we'll continue to look at it as part of the economies of scale, the AI solutions, etc. Our target range for L&T Technology Services would be between that 10.5% to 11% range, which will take us a few quarters, more than a few quarters, but that's what we're working towards.
Thank you, Rajeev.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Rahul Jain from Dholat Capital. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. Most of my question has been answered. Just one thing, just to try to get into this 16.5 that we are talking about, does that build a significant growth acceleration in the coming year, or a similar growth rate that we are blocking this year should be able to reach this point?
Sorry. This gradual way we have talked about 16, mid-16, before this, we will carry on with that, I mean, from here on. It will be quite gradual. Of course, the next two.
The question was more on the growth side. Do we expect growth acceleration as a precondition for this to get achieved?
Not really. We haven't put like, you know, growth will only lead to margins. I think I've talked about three or four areas. Of course, there is one growth, quality of revenue. We are seeing a lot of large deal wins in Sustainability, which is, of course, a tailwind for us. That's one. Second, you'll continue to see AI-led delivery improvements. I mean, that's across all the functions, right? We are looking at AI internally and also trying to see how best we can drive efficiency and economies. Third, I talked about SG&A. I also said the targeted range. That's the third part. We are looking at the portfolio because we want to be mindful in terms of how we want to grow the organization more towards where we see the opportunities with the customers and to tap into the newer areas of technology.
Any of the accounts or portfolio that are not margin accretive, we will give it a serious look, right? These are three, four areas that we're looking at. It's not just hinging on growth.
Sure. I mean, given the kind of run rate we are seeing right now on the growth side of it, and also that we are probably at a lower point of our margin in the last several years, what is so obvious to you that gives you that confidence a meaningful 200 to 300 bps margin uptake is quite a possibility?
The 200 to 300 bps margin improvement that you're talking of, of course, is over a period of time. I've talked about between quarter four FY2027 and quarter one FY2028. That's one. It will happen sequentially. Having said that, I think the biggest uptake that you'll see is the strategic support that we called out in quarter one, quarter four, quarter one, and quarter two of this year, concludes in quarter two, right? That will lead to a margin uptake. Of course, all the large deal wins that we are seeing in Sustainability, I mean, of course, that is the highest margin segment that we have. Mobility, we expect it to come back in terms of growth and profitability in Q4. There are varied factors. It is not that you know suddenly you see a 200, 300 bps improvement. That's all sequentially lined up.
Thank you.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that was our last question. I would now like to hand the conference over to Mr. Sandesh Naik for closing comments. Over to you, sir.
Thank you all for joining us on the call today. We hope we were able to answer your queries. Any follow-ups, we will be happy to address them. With that, we are signing off and wish you a happy Diwali again. Thank you all.
Thank you. On behalf of L&T Technology Services Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you all for joining us. You may now disconnect your lines.