Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to Persistent Systems earnings conference call for the second quarter of FY 2023, ended September 30th, 2022. We have with us today on the call Dr. Anand Deshpande, Chairman and Managing Director, Mr. Sandeep Kalra, Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Sunil Sapre, Executive Director and Chief Financial Officer, Mr. Saurabh Dwivedi, Head of Investor Relations, and Mr. Amit Atre, Company Secretary. Please note all participants' line will be on listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after management's opening remark. Should you need any assistance during the call, please raise your hand from the Participant tab on the screen.
While asking question, request you to please identify yourself and your company name. Please note this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference to Mr. Sandeep Kalra. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thank you. Good afternoon, good evening, good morning to all of you, depending on where you are joining from. I would like to thank you for spending time with us on the eve of Diwali, and would like to wish you the best for the festive season in advance. I would like to start this call by sharing certain important milestones that we achieved in this quarter. We reached the annualized run rate of $1 billion, doubling our revenues over the past three years. We achieved quarterly revenue run rate in excess of INR 2,000 crores. Our trailing 12 months EPS crossed INR 100 for the first time. We were included in the Nifty IT index, which is representative of the best performing companies in our Indian IT industry.
We are humbled by these milestones, and I would like to sincerely thank each one of our 22,400+ Persistent team members for their resilience, our customers, our investors, and other stakeholders on this call for their continued trust in us. With this, let me come to the quarterly financials. We are happy to report yet another solid growth quarter across all major business and financial metrics, despite a dynamic and rapidly evolving macroeconomic environment. The revenues for Q2 came in at $255.56 million, giving us a growth of 5.8% quarter-on-quarter and 40.2% on year-on-year basis. This is the first quarter where we have crossed the annualized run rate of $1 billion, a milestone that we called out almost three years back.
As you are aware, the cross-currency impact in this quarter has been significant for our industry. For us, the constant currency sequential growth for Q2 came in at 6.6% compared to the USD growth of 5.8%, as mentioned earlier. This information is also available in our analyst deck. In rupee terms, the growth was 9.1% quarter-on-quarter and 51.6% on year-on-year basis respectively. This was the first full quarter of consolidation for MediaAgility. Adjusting for the revenue from acquired business, our organic growth for the quarter was approximately 4.8% on a sequential basis in USD terms and 5.5% in constant currency terms. As you are aware, this robust growth comes back.
comes on the back of five successive quarters of 9%+ sequential growth on dollar basis and marks another quarter of top quartile revenue growth in an increasingly challenging macroeconomic environment. Coming to the profitability side. On the EBIT side, our EBIT for Q1 came in at 14.6%. This translates into an EBIT growth of 11.1% on quarter-on-quarter basis and 59.4% on Y-on-Y basis. EBIT margin expanded by 30 basis points on a sequential basis despite the major cost headwinds related to wage hike which became effective for us from July 1st, 2022, for all our employees. Sunil will provide more color on the EBIT margin movement later in this call. Coming to the order book for the quarter. Q2 was yet another strong quarter for us in terms of TCV order wins.
The total contract value for the quarter came in at $367.8 million, with new bookings TCV coming in at $228.3 million. The annual contract value component of this TCV is of the order of $271.2 million, of which the new bookings ACV component contributed to $137 million. As you may already be aware by now, these TCV/ACV numbers include all bookings, small and large, renewals, as well as new bookings across existing and new customers. Coming to the people front. We brought in a total of 838 new colleagues in Q2, bringing our total employee base to 22,476 team members globally. This is at the end of September 2022. Majority of the new employee addition during the quarter can be attributed to our freshers hiring.
We have honored all the offers made to campus hires with approximately 3,000 freshers joining us over the past two quarters. With this, we have completed our fresher hiring program for the year. A small portion of the freshers have already become billable while we expect others to become billable on customer projects over the next two to three quarters, providing us ample cushion on the supply side for future business ramp-up and providing us a margin lever as well. The utilization for the quarter came in at 79.9%, a rise from 79.5% for Q1. Utilization rate is a function of our endeavors to operate efficiently while maintaining a healthy buffer to staff future projects on time.
Apart from other factors such as revenue growth leverage, increased utilization over time will be an important margin lever for us as more of our freshers become billable on customer projects. The trailing twelve-month attrition for the quarter came in at 23.7% compared to 24.8% in Q1. We have witnessed some amount of stabilization in this metric over the past three quarters. We do expect the TTM attrition to continue to moderate over the course of the second half of FY2 023, aided by fresher availability, better outcomes on our employee value related interventions, and a general moderation of hiring across the sector. Before we delve more into the last quarter's performance, I would like to make some comments on the macroeconomic environment along with our response and preparedness to deal with it.
As is well known by now, the global economy is currently experiencing several headwinds, including inflation, tight labor markets, geopolitical tensions, and currency volatility, to name a few. A number of our customers are keenly watching the macroeconomic environment unfold, and there are discussions about cost optimization, impact of a stronger U.S. dollar on the global company's financials, bracing for an overall economic slowdown over the next several quarters, and being prudent about longer-term spend commitments. In this context, our first priority is staying close to our customers, remaining relevant for their transformation as well as optimization initiatives, and making efforts to help them stay competitive in their respective businesses. The current environment is also lending itself to long-term and larger deals if one can address the changing nature of the client demand.
On one hand, our strongly differentiated capabilities across the enterprise software market are giving us a unique advantage in this marketplace, and we are witnessing strong deal wins and closures in this space, along with good pipeline generation in core product development as well as professional services. On the other hand, our capabilities across hyperscalers in BFSI and healthcare life sciences space are making our offerings even more relevant to customers as they look to optimize their spend in business as usual and pivot some of the savings towards transformation journeys while bracing for a potential revenue slowdown. We remain cautiously optimistic about our growth potential as we go ahead and are focused on executing well in the evolving macroeconomic environment. Now coming to the acquisitions-related update. As we have been sharing with you in the previous quarters, the integration of our acquired businesses has been progressing well.
We are in the final stages of our integration initiatives with Data Glove and MediaAgility, our latest M&A deals. We have also benefited from some early wins as a result of teamwork and cross-pollination of capabilities across our unified customer base. We are confident all this will bode well for us as an organization, and each of our acquired entities will fuel a new avenue of growth for us over the coming quarters and years. Coming to ESG. We continue to make good progress on the ESG front. We are pleased to share with you that Persistent has been accepted as a participant of the United Nations Global Compact. We have also participated in the Carbon Disclosure Project, the CDP project, and Dow Jones Sustainability Indices, the surveys, and will share with you further progress on these fronts in subsequent quarters.
We continue to make progress towards our climate action goal of becoming net zero by 2030, as well as improving on our diversity and inclusion metrics. In summary, we are pleased with our performance in Q2 FY 2023, with healthy revenue growth, order wins across our focus industry segments, a good pipeline generation, and stable profitability despite cost headwinds. With this, I will turn the call to our CFO, Sunil Sapre, to give our detailed color on the quarterly financials and related matters. I'll come back after Sunil's comments to give you some more details on key client wins, analyst awards, and other recognitions for the quarter. Over to you, Sunil.
Yeah. Thank you, Sandeep, and good evening, good day to all, and thank you for taking out the time to join us today. As you heard, from Sandeep about the market outlook and some of the business specific details, let me now walk you through the details of financial performance, including some details about the revenue and the margin movement. As you know, the revenue at $255.56 million registered QoQ growth of 5.8% and YoY growth of 40.2%. In constant currency, the revenue growth was 6.6%. If you look at for the half year, the total revenue stood at $497.08 million, with YoY growth of 42.4%.
In terms of rupee revenue, it was INR 2,048.6 million, reflecting growth of 9.1% QoQ and 51.6% YoY. In terms of half-year rupee revenue, it was INR 3,926.8 million with growth of 52.1%. This quarter, you would have seen significant increase in the IP-led revenue, which registered strong growth of 18.1%, mainly in the Accelerite portfolio we have. While our services revenue continued the growth trajectory with 4.9% QoQ growth in dollar terms. Coming to segmental growth for the quarter, we saw all the segments registering growth with BFSI growing by 3.1%, technology companies grew by 8.3%, and healthcare grew by 4.6%. Coming to more details about revenue.
In respect of linear revenue, the offshore linear revenue grew by 7.4%, comprising of volume growth of 4.8% and billing rate increase of 2.5%. The onsite linear revenue grew by 0.9%, primarily on account of volume growth of 2.5%, while billing rate declined by 1.5%. The contribution from nearshore geos was higher during this quarter, while Europe revenue was lower on account of the seasonal softness in Europe due to vacations, which together resulted in drop in the onsite realization rate by 1.5%. As you would have seen, starting last quarter, we have been providing additional details on our client buckets. For the quarter gone, by customer count in greater than 30 million bucket remained constant at three.
In INR 20 million-INR 30 million, the customer count rose to three as compared to one in Q1, as two customers in the lower category moved up to this bucket. In the INR 10 million-INR 20 million category, the count declined to six from seven, with two clients moving to the higher revenue bucket of INR 20 million-INR 30 million, as mentioned, in the earlier point. In the INR 5 million-INR 10 million category, customer count rose to 18 from 15 in the last quarter. Finally, in the INR 1 million-INR 5 million category, the number of customers increased from 104 last quarter to 116 in this quarter. The above customer categorization, just for your reference, is based on TTM revenue of these customers.
You would observe from the fact sheet that we also provided historical details on these metrics to help you get a sense of the trend of these metrics over time. You will notice that this consistent increase in the number of accounts we have in 1 million-5 million and 5 million-10 million categories over last few quarters has helped reduce the client concentration over last few quarters. As you are aware, during the quarter we had annual pay hike, which is effective July. This had an impact of 230 basis points on the margin. Provision for doubtful debts and higher CSR spend has had an impact of 20 basis points and 10 basis points respectively.
These were largely compensated by higher IP-led revenue, as I mentioned earlier, helping margin by 80 basis points, favorable currency which helped by 90 basis points and margin from the higher services revenue. There are also other items, as you would know, that last quarter we had travel expenses including visa filing costs, which is a seasonal item which is not there this quarter. We also had slightly lower subcontracting costs this quarter. With this, EBITDA came in at 18.0% for this quarter as compared to 17.7% in the previous quarter and 16.6% in the Q2 of last year. EBITDA for first half of the year was at 17.9% vis-a-vis 16.5% in the corresponding period last year. Coming to depreciation and amortization.
Amortization was higher on account of full quarter impact of MediaAgility acquisition. With higher revenue, of course, in terms of percentage, total depreciation and amortization was 3.4% of revenue. With this, EBIT was 14.6% as against 14.3% in the previous quarter and 13.9% in the corresponding quarter of last year. For H1, EBIT stood at 14.5% as against 13.7% for the corresponding period last year. Coming to treasury income. For the quarter, the income was lower at INR 61 million as against INR 89 million, mainly on account of interest on borrowings availed for part financing the acquisitions and reduced treasury size due to some of the surplus funds being used for M&A.
If you look at the interest income of this year's H1 versus last year's H1, as you know, effective first quarter of this year we have been consolidating the ESOP trust and the interest income of INR 104 million on loan given to ESOP trust has been eliminated on consolidation. Further, this year there is an MTM loss on long-term mutual funds arising from increase in interest rates in this year, whereas there was MTM gain last year. This, along with lower treasury surplus and interest on borrowings for acquisitions, resulted in lower income, lower other income on an H1 to H1 basis.
In respect of Forex loss or gain, it was INR 91 million of loss as against gain of INR 42 million, and this was mainly because of the sharp currency movement we saw, which resulted in MTM loss on hedges which were taken a year ago at an average rate of around INR 77-INR 78 . Profit before tax was INR 2,956 million at 14.4% as against 15% in the previous quarter. ETR was 25.6% as against 24.9% in the previous quarter, and we expect that to be at these levels for the rest of the year. PAT for the quarter was INR 2,200 million at 10.7% of revenue as against INR 2,116 million in the previous quarter at 11.3% of revenue.
PAT for the first half of the year was INR 431.6 million at 11%, registering growth of 37.9%. EPS for the quarter was INR 29.61 as against INR 28.50 in the previous quarter. The growth in EPS is 3.9% while growth in reported PAT was 4% QoQ. As you know, for purposes of calculation of EPS, shares held by ESOP trust are excluded. The operational CapEx for the quarter was INR 51.9 million. Cash and investment on the books was INR 15,719 million as at September thirtieth, as compared to INR 14,792 million as at June 30th. DSO came in at 60 days, same as in the previous quarter.
Forward contracts outstanding at the end of September was $195 million at an average rate of 79.95 per dollar. With hedges in the recent period coming at forward rates of 82+, the average rate will get adjusted over a couple of months. With this, I thank you once again, and I wish you all a very happy Diwali and hand it back to Sandeep.
Thank you, Sunil. Now let me talk to you about our key wins for Q2 by industry segments. Coming to the software, high tech and emerging industries. We were chosen as a professional services and solutions partner to scale the adoption of software products in North America and EMEA for a leading European enterprise software player.
This is the largest TCV deal win for us in Q2 with TCV in excess of $80 million over five years. We were chosen by a leading ESG, environmental, social, and governance software player in this segment for providing engineering services, building products for these segments. Coming to banking, financial services, and insurance. Persistent was chosen by a fintech unicorn based out of India for the end-to-end program ownership for development of an automated data-driven risk and pricing platform which is used by leading banks, NBFCs, and insurance companies in India and other emerging markets. Persistent was chosen by a pioneer in fractional trading and embedded finance to design and implement an integration platform for servicing the end customers using APIs. Coming to healthcare life sciences.
Persistent was chosen to expand the center of excellence for automation and low code business process management platform for a large U.S.-based biopharmaceutical services company. Persistent was chosen to build the next generation data platform using deep industry expertise for a large biotech company which is a leader in building life transforming medicines. Moving on to the awards and recognitions for the quarter. Q2 saw us get continued recognition from industry leading analyst firms and associations. To mention a few, MediaAgility, recently acquired by Persistent, was named as a niche player in the 2022 Gartner Magic Quadrant for public cloud IT transformation services. We were recognized by Dun & Bradstreet as a top performer in the growth performance categories in software and BPM sectors in their 22nd edition of India's Top 500 Companies publication.
In summary, we continue to deliver top quartile revenue growth in Q2 FY 2023 along with healthy profitability which remained resilient despite a key cost headwind associated with wage hikes. Even as we see good traction for our services among our client base, along with new deal wins and new logo addition, we remain watchful of the macroeconomic situation and are proactively staying close to our clients, aiding them in prioritizing their technology spend towards transformation and optimization. Our deep digital engineering expertise gives us significant competitive advantage in our market and our recent acquisitions have bolstered our cloud and industry capabilities, strengthening our key hyperscaler partnerships. We hope to build on the healthy growth momentum we witnessed in Q2 FY 2023 as we go forward. With this I would like to conclude the prepared remarks and would like to request the operator to open the floor for questions. Operator?
Thank you, sir. Now we open the call for Q&A session. We will wait for a few minutes till the queue assembles. We request you to constrain yourself with two questions and fall back in line for more questions. Please raise your hand from the participant tab on the screen to ask the questions. First question is from Bhavik Mehta.
Hey, thanks. Thanks for the opportunity and firstly congratulations, Sandeep and Sunil for a great set of numbers. I have two questions. Firstly, Sandeep, can you talk about how the deal signings are trending for you given the macro where, you know, we have heard that a lot of clients are cautious about their tech spend. So are there any delays you are witnessing in deal signings? And also if you can break it down across your three verticals you know how the client behavior is different in the three verticals. The other question is if I look at your book-to-bill ratio at 1.4 which is the lowest since you started reporting this metric 10 quarters ago.
How should we be worried about a lower book-to-bill ratio or is this a timing issue where some of the deals were delayed and so you know we should overlook this number? The last question is to Sunil. How should we look at margins for the second half? Because you know initially the target was to achieve 13.9% similar to last year, but we are already at 14.5% in Q1 and a lot of the headwinds are behind, wage hikes are behind, attrition is coming down. How should we look at the trajectory of margins for the second half? That's it from my side.
Sure. Let me take the book-to-bill part because it's the easiest one. Other ones are a little longer. I don't think you should worry about the book-to-bill part. If you look at our bookings we have been consistently, you know, delivering very healthy ACV and TCV bookings. If you look at our TCV bookings for a trailing twelve-month basis it's roughly about $1.45 billion. Our ACV bookings are roughly about $1.1 billion. For a company that is doing $255 million on a quarterly run rate basis I do think you know from what we understand of our business this is a fairly healthy set of bookings and that bodes well for our trajectory going ahead. I won't read too much into book-to-bill and worry about it.
Now in terms of the deal signings I will try and keep it brief because we want to take a bunch of questions so I'll give you an uber answer and if we have time towards the end of the call I'll try and get into each of the segments and I'll just take one segment for now. If you look at our deal signings so far we've delivered pretty much for the last two quarters anywhere upwards of $370 million in TCV and relatively good $270 million or so in ACV terms. Now there are some deals that could have slipped from the last quarter to this quarter but you know that is the nature of the game. So far there is not much delays.
Now, interesting thing would be how the Q3 pans out because Q3 is a short quarter. There are too many, you know, things happening in this quarter in terms of Thanksgiving. There's Christmas. There may be furloughs. There may be other things that are there. This will be a short quarter and we will have to see as the quarter pans out if the, you know, decision making given the macro, given the short quarter, you know, impacts the deal closures in this. The pipeline is good. We will have to just let the quarter pan out. We deal with three different segments, as you rightly said. We deal with the enterprise software segment or the ISV segment on one side, and BFSI, healthcare life sciences.
If you look at it, some of the things that we have been seeing from our company's specific perspective, we have a fairly strong, you know, foray in the product development side. Whether it is horizontal ISVs or it is, you know, vertical specific ISVs, and that is the tenet we take to the enterprises as well. We have been seeing pretty good deal wins. We announced two large deal wins in the last two quarters. One was $70 million in the quarter before. The last quarter was $80 million. Single TCV kind of, you know, deal wins. So from that perspective, we very strongly believe in the enterprise software slash ISV segment. We have the best right to win and seat to the table, so that continues to give us good pipeline.
Similarly, on BFSI and healthcare life sciences, we do see some amount of, you know, delays in deal signings, etc. , but not to the extent that one should be worried about. Again, as I said, we'll let the Q3 pan out. Sunil, over to you for the margin part.
Yeah. Bhavik, on the margin side, there are basically three important elements. One is what you call the currency movement, which was positive in this period. As you know, 90 basis points being contributed by that, which gets reflected in EBIT. A part of that gets unwound after EBIT in form of Forex loss on the hedges that we would have taken in the past. Net-net, say about 40-50 basis points of benefit comes in the effective eventual margin, so to say. The other element is with respect to IP revenue and what is the composition of IP revenue in terms of royalty and our own IPs under the Accelerite portfolio. Thirdly, the operating efficiency improvement and the leverage that we should get as we keep scaling.
Two of these factors, in terms of operating efficiency and leverage and IP revenues, are internal, while currency movement is external. In terms of IP revenue, it has certain seasonality. It's not like every quarter may have that kind of IP revenues. On an overall basis, I would say that we feel confident to hold the margins at these levels should currency not be playing, you know, another volatile kind of thing.
We generally hope that currency will hold at this level or may maybe a little bit softer in the last quarter, but the current indications are that, what you call, we will not see dollar rupee going back to 78, 79 so very soon. It might, the dollar may appreciate further before it, you know, claws back. That's our current expectation. You're right, there is potential to hold it and work on operating efficiency to improve it further.
Thank you. The next question is from Manik Taneja.
Hi. Thank you for the opportunity and congratulations for the very consistent performance in the current quarter as well. Sandeep, I wanted to get your thoughts, given the decline that we've seen in our top line revenue performance this quarter, should we expect some tail impact going into 3Q and 4Q as well? That's question number one. Does this change the outlook that we have provided in the past of 4%-6% kind of a sequential growth for the foreseeable future? The second question was for Sunil on the revenue productivity trends. We have seen offshore revenue productivity increase for three quarters now. How should we be thinking about this dynamic going forward? Thank you.
Manik, let me take the first question. Look, we have been working with our top client for more than 18 years in different forms and shapes. Now, we have seen many cycles where, you know, every client has their own specific nuances. Every client has their own business, their own macroeconomic environment impact. They all have to do their puts and takes of their own priorities. We've always seen whenever there has been some amount of work between us and them in supporting any of the requests that may be there in terms of any restructuring and whatever else, we've always come back stronger over the quarters. As far as the immediate Q3, Q4 is concerned, I don't expect any major material impact.
A couple of million dollars here or there in our bigger picture of things when we are at a billion-dollar run rate is not anything material, if that happens. Even if that happens, we have the assurance from our top customer that all these are short-term adjustments that they're doing, and they are committed to working with us on their newer things as well. I would not be reading too much into it. Second, look, our proof of the pudding is we have performed consistently over the last nearly 10 quarters. It's been 10 quarters of sequential revenue growth, profitability, stabilization or growth. Even in the COVID times we have come through very well.
Even this quarter, current quarter, if you look at it, and this is for you and all other investors on the line, 5.8% dollar terms, 6.6% or thereabout in constant currency terms. Even after adjusting for, you know, the client-specific issue that you're talking about, talks about the robustness of the system that we have built. That is where I would want to leave it. As far as the 4%-6% growth that you talked about, that will be our endeavor to continue to do that. We let the macroeconomic environment pan out. Our endeavor would be we would be best in class. Growth would be profitability. Growth would be the preference for us. Profitability, same or better, would be the second thing for us. With that, I'll hand over to Sunil for the next answer. Sunil.
Manik, this offshore rate realization is a function of two items, essentially. Our ability to manage fixed price projects, which we do in some of our businesses
Both onsite, I mean, both export business as well as domestic business. The other part is how much is our pricing power in terms of ability to get, you know, COLA increases and so on. Over the last few quarters, this was, you can say a conversation that we had with several customers, and many of them were amenable considering the high attrition that the industry was facing. This is what you call a combined result of this. The change from quarter to quarter could happen. So far as the rates, if you hold them steady, it is more out of the efficiency of execution of fixed price projects. I hope that helps, you know, get you a flavor of that.
Thank you. The next question is from Karan Danthi.
Hi, Sandeep and Sunil. Thanks for taking my questions. Since you have such a great vantage point into enterprise software deal flow. I think one of the concerns is Europe and just how the macro in Europe, given it's such a big market for enterprise software, is going to evolve from here. Some companies are saying like ServiceNow that there's been you know it's been harder to sign those deals. I'm just wondering kind of how that plays into your business practice. On a related note, which is this is the second part of that first question. There's again this broader argument of consumption-based software businesses and deal-based software businesses, and I'm curious kind of what you're seeing in terms of the resilience of consumption-based software businesses versus deal-based software businesses. That's the first.
Which areas, I guess, would, 'cause you know, essentially, when dealing with an inflationary environment, software helps deflate. There's a clear need to adopt software faster. I'm just curious, since you have a lot of partnerships, you know, where do you see acceleration because of the need to deflate fast. Meaning acceleration of adoption of certain verticals, vendors because of the need to deflate fast. This is a broader comment in the cloud, which is there gonna be faster adoption of the cloud or slower adoption of the cloud? Who are the related vendors, I guess, that would benefit?
This is a one-hour discussion itself, but let me try and address it. I'm sure you seem very knowledgeable about this, so I'll keep it at a high level. Now, whether it is, you know, the European market or overall market, a number of the enterprise software companies are global in nature, so they will face some headwinds in the U.S., they may face higher headwinds in Europe and other parts of the world. There are also, you know, the enterprise software companies are not just one block, as you rightly said, there are companies that are deal-based software, consumption-based software, born in the cloud. The companies that are public companies for long, the companies that have gone public in the last two, three years. There's dynamics, different dynamics for different people.
Let's take a company that basically was born in the cloud, dependent on consumption-based software, went public in the last two to three years. Pretty much any company in that category would have been a unicorn before they went public, and they would have had this rule of 40, where the revenue growth and profitability put together, as long as you had that greater than 40%, you were golden. Your valuations were, you know, absolutely gold. Now in an environment where there's a recessionary environment looming on our heads, nobody knows when, how much deeper, how long it will last and so on. There is going to be slowdown of enterprise software and people are already starting to see it. Now, what that means is if the revenue growth is not gonna happen, they're already not profitable.
A number of these companies that went public, for example, in the last two, three years, they're not profitable. They need to really look at their profitability. They really didn't have a globalization strategy from their product development perspective, product support perspective, professional services perspective. A number of those didn't really care about those when the revenue growth was happening. They were focused on that. In the new environment, that whole dynamic is changing. Now, no longer the revenue growth is there, so profitability is important. Globalization from a product development perspective, having a coherent strategy and working with partners like ourselves who are absolute experts in this, is becoming an absolute important thing for them. If we were to talk to any of our, you know, potential customers or customers, existing customers, the CXOs, I'm not talking about the working level.
The CXOs, they clearly understand and they clearly engage with us and that is where we are emanating a number of large deals. These may be public companies, these may be private equity hold enterprise companies, and they may also be unicorns that were successful, were moving towards profitability but are now challenged. They are across U.S., across Europe. I hope that gives you a kind of a flavor towards where we are seeing the discussions pan out and so on. Now, you know, again, the debate about consumption-based software versus deal-based software. Deal-based software companies would be companies which are more established for many more years and so on. I would say they have a little more pain at size and scale. Although the consumption-based software companies, not everyone is at the size and scale of a Snowflake.
They are smaller companies and the addressable market for us may be slightly lesser than. I'll park it there because, you know, this could go on and on. Now, in terms of any vendors, I would not want to name vendors because we partner with all of the hyperscalers. I wouldn't want to say one hyperscaler versus the other. There are different dynamics. Azure plays in a different space than AWS. AWS, not many retailers would want to take. Azure is prevalent because of Microsoft, you know, percolation all through the enterprises across verticals. Google specializes in certain areas more than others, but we are seeing healthy things in different segments of the market, and we are partnering with each one of them. With that, I will stop on this. Hopefully that answered you.
Thank you. The next question is from Ruchi Mukhija.
Congratulations, Sandeep, for a Q2 very strong performance. I had a couple of questions. I'll try to be restricted to two. First was on the BFSI. Now, in terms of your client mix, it's quite diverse, ranging from large Western banks to mid-size and fintechs versus insurance companies. Do you see a difference in their tech spending pattern in current backdrop between a large bank, mid-size and fintechs?
Right. Look, if we look at the broader trend, and I'll restrict it to the broader trend. Most of the banks and insurance companies, they're expecting a mild recession in the U.S. I talk more about the U.S. because for Persistent per se, 79% of our business is the U.S. Our business in financial services is mostly U.S. and India. In India, we are pretty much there for any NBFCs and financial services organizations, more on loan origination systems and other things. That's pretty much robust. Now, when I look at the global things, globally, we are looking at the banks and insurance companies and similar organizations prioritize the spend and the management of resources.
They are definitely trying to cut costs in business as usual so as to be able to sustain their, you know, initiatives which were started in the last one to two years in terms of their own transformation. Launching newer digital products, etc . Now, if you look at things like digital payments, customer experience, business process, data analytics, et c., we do expect, based on our discussions, these investments will continue. Legacy stack will be the one where the money has to be squeezed out to be funneling this, and some money will go towards EBITDA improvement for them. I could give you more color. One last thing I would want to say, we are not exposed much to the mortgage market. We were working with apologies.
We're working with a leading, you know, mortgage platform provider where we have seen some impact, but it is not material to our revenues. Our mortgage-related exposure is not much at all. From that perspective, thankfully, we are pretty much okay. I'll want to restrict it there. Any other questions I can answer.
Sure. I'll move to the next one. We have heard from some of your peers that today the nature of the demand is changing. You see more cost optimization-focused deal along with the revenue growth initiatives. Could you share with us what are the differences that you see between these cost-focused contracts in terms of deal sizes, tenure, delivery or execution cycle, and also profitability?
Sure. Let me give you some examples. For example, and I'll take two segments this time. Let's say the enterprise software market. If you look at the enterprise software market, back to the earlier question that was asked by, you know, Karan, I guess. We have been working with many customers. For example, I talked about a $80 million deal where we are partnering with a leading European software, you know, enterprise software company. This deal is about taking over a chunk of professional services, optimizing it from a right-sizing perspective, scaling it from a lower-cost location perspective, bringing automation, et c. , and so on and so forth. This is a five-year deal. This is not a smaller project and so on. This is about a $80 million deal.
If I go to a leading, you know, let's say third-party administrator of insurance services, there we have basically done a deal, for example, to take over the entire application support, to take over infrastructure support, move, you know, a bunch of infrastructure and applications to the cloud, help them optimize their spend. Again, this is a kind of a five-year deal and so on. Like that, there are multiple deals in different segments. Even from a transformation perspective. Earlier, people were very happy taking transformation-related, you know, projects to be done totally on-site, very little spend offshore. Now they are very amenable to doing, you know, literally 20%-30% on-site.
Willing to, you know, look at spending more from offshore so that they get more for the same money and they are able to, you know, get their programs last longer, do the multiple phases of it and while saving money at the same time. There are contours of cost reduction, cost savings, both in transformation and in business as usual. Hopefully that gives you a color.
Thank you. The next question is from Nitin Padmanabhan.
Yeah, hi. Thanks for the opportunity. Two quick ones actually. One is, over the past few months, if you look at the velocity of deals or the decision-making cycles, I just wanted your experience there and why and the existing book of business that's anyway underway. Are you seeing more client-specific issues and do you see that sort of getting worse as it goes forward? The second part is on the furloughs and what do you have clarity on furloughs going into the quarter? The IP business, how are you thinking about that business today? Because growth has been pretty solid after a very long time. Is there any change in thought process within that business as we move forward? Those were the two bunches of questions. Thanks.
Yeah, there are four questions. Let me try and address them quickly. In terms of velocity, as I said earlier, so far we have not seen that be impacted that much. Q3 will be the proof of the pudding because, you know, the war seems to be elongating. This is a short quarter. There are too many holidays. There are furloughs that are being talked about. Back to your point about furloughs. There are discussions about furloughs. There's no firm decision that has been given to us. There are some furloughs that have happened for many years, so I wouldn't say that, you know, some of the customers are doing furloughs for the first time. We have seen this. Not only us, the entire industry has seen some of the largest, you know, tech companies, some of the largest financial services organizations, they have a pattern.
Every year they do one to two weeks of furloughs. The only question would be, would this year, this quarter be different? That we will have to let it pan out. We will have a clarity by November mid or December first week on all that. Now, in terms of customer-specific issues, as of this point in time, there are none other than whatever have been reflected in our financials so far. If there are any, we'll come back and report to you. Our endeavor would be to make sure first we avoid these things. But you know, sometimes you can't wish customer relationships to be only a one-way lane. You can't just expect customers to just give you more and more.
If they have a macroeconomic headwind in their business, it's our job as well to sometimes work with them, even if that means, you know, cutting down our, you know, expectation of what they spend on us to be coming back as they kind of spend more over period of quarters and years. So I would not want to read too much into customer-specific issues. Relationships are what matter. Revenues can go up and down, and our first intent would be to make sure that the relationship stays strong. Back to your point on any more customer-specific issues, no. Now, IP business, how are we looking at it? Look, IP business for us is one of the biggest differentiators as well.
In our Accelerite business, we run at least three to four enterprise class products, where if you fly a Delta Air Lines in the U.S. or some other airline like that, there may be some IP that we may have which may be patching their systems or do whatever else. There may be, you know, ATMs that you may be using globally. Little known, our software may be running some of those. In India, you may be, you know, doing some of the purchases on some of the online stuff where we may be behind it. So it is a big differentiator for us. It's also a profitability lever for us. These are, you know, products right from what we have acquired from HP, Intel, Citrix, all of this is public domain knowledge, to many others.
Now, if we can take them, modernize them, sell more of them, it gives us additional profitability. We will endeavor to do that and also use some of this as a reusable IP in our customer engagements and so on. Our endeavor would be wherever we can do it, get better revenues and profitability, we'll continue to do that, and that's where a focus team is on that part. We'll keep reporting anything if it changes on this. I'll keep it there. We have 14 minutes left and we want to take more questions. Nitin, I hope that answers you.
The next question is from Chirag.
Hi, Sandeep. Congratulations on very, you know, remarkable execution and a good set of numbers. I have a few questions, like, in terms of IP revenue, our number of clients billed are higher compared to previous four quarter. But if you look at the contribution in terms of revenue, it is on lower end. Is there any low margin selling or a client billed during this quarter?
I wouldn't say there is any low margin, you know, client billed during this quarter. That is not the case. Now, IP revenue for us is again, you know, three kind of IP revenues. One, that comes from our top customer, where we have certain deals where we get a revenue share. Number two, if we go and sell a solution which has embedded components from a partner, whether it's a low-code, no-code related stuff or some other, you know, solution, that's the second part. Third part is our erstwhile Accelerite portfolio. I wouldn't believe, knowing what I know about the business, that there's anything that has material low, you know, value kind of deal from a margin perspective done. I would leave it there.
Okay. One more question. In terms of client engagement size versus the bifurcation which you've given in fact sheet, if you look at the numbers in category of INR 5 million-INR 10 million range, it has increased significantly in last one year. In INR 10 million-INR 20 million bracket, it remains stagnant. Are we targeting more lower ticket engagement size to diversify portfolio? Is there any such strategy put in place?
No. I think you should read it in conjunction with the number of customers in the 20 million-30 million size as well. If you look at FY 2022, we had two customers who were greater than $30 million. Right now, we have three. If you look at the number of customers in the bracket of 20-30, that has also increased. Overall, if you look at it, every category is showing progression. From that perspective, we are happy about it. Can we do better? Absolutely. I don't think there's a cause of worry, but we'll try and do better.
The next question is from Suraj Malu.
Hi. I have two questions. First question is, our top client, which is IBM, it has seen a de-growth over past three quarters. Could you please throw some light so as to what went wrong with our largest client who had been contributing around 20% of our revenues?
First of all, I would not want to name anyone and so on. There are confidentiality issues out there, right there. Now, I wouldn't say there are any issues. If you look at even whatever name you gave, the results and so on, they're doing well. Our top client announced their results yesterday, and they are doing well, and I sincerely wish they keep doing well and even better. Now, as far as our relationship is concerned, if there are revenues that go down, it may not be because of issues. It may be because it. We had clearly called out about three quarters back. There was a deal that we had for five years which was not very profitable for us. We had worked collaboratively with them.
We had folded significant part of that deal back into the top customer and we had continued a certain percentage at T&M. That was one part. Now, over a period of time, as the macro evolves, everyone has to take a look at where their spend priorities are, where they want to spend their $100 if they have $100 to spend, whether it is on existing products, new products and so on. If they are reprioritizing any of their spend and we have to work with them, we'll happily work with them. They have been good supporters of us for the last 18 years, and we'll continue to get the spend back as we kind of work with them on newer programs. I won't read too much into it. Again, look, no customer will be a one-way street throughout life.
Relationships, as I said earlier, are more important than the spend in this quarter or the next quarter. It'll come back if we have a good relationship.
The next question is from Rishi Jhunjhunwala.
Yeah, thanks for the opportunity. Just a couple of, you know, questions to understand stuff better. Sandeep, one thing is that, you know, we have been announcing our overall TCV for past eight quarters now, and over this period, of course, you know, macro has deteriorated. Just wanted to understand, have you seen any kind of change in, you know, conversion of these deals into revenues? So for example, if you have almost like $1.1 billion worth of, you know, ACV in the past four quarters, you know, would that translate into a similar amount over a twelve-month period itself? Or have you seen, you know, delays in those conversions as well?
Rishi, very good question. Look, there are delays that happen because of two things. There are delays that can happen because of customers, once they sign, even the ramp-up, the way it is, at times it gets delayed. There's no science to, you know, predict it before it happens. There is some amount of revenue leakage that happens because of that. At times there's revenue leakage that happens because we are not able to fulfill in time in line with what the customer expects, and that causes another set of delays. I would say roughly, if you were to say what is the impact of it, anywhere between 6%-8% would be the impact of this. We try to minimize this impact because this is revenue leakage for us as well.
It also causes delays at the customer side at times. That is where I would say, and it is not just that it has gone one way or the other over the quarters. This has been the case because the labor market for talent that we need has been tight. Even now, while attrition has come down, even now, there's pent-up demand at our end. If we could get, you know, significant number of qualified people as of today, we could build them and fulfill the demand, which is leading to some of the revenue leakage that may happen.
Next question is from Mohit Jain.
Sir, two questions. One was related to the top line decline. Is there a chance that we would have booked this TCV sometime last year, which we need to revise because of the ramp down that we have seen in this quarter? That was one. Second was related to DSOs. Now, operating capital is little on the lower side for the first half. Is there a change in working capital requirement for any of your clients?
The first part I'll take first, and then I'll have Sunil address the DSO part. Look, the decline that has happened is basically in contracts which are renewed on an annual basis. Most of our contracts outside of the IP contracts are renewed on an annual basis in this particular, you know, case. Whatever we have lost is basically for this year because it would have got renewed in this quarter because most of the U.S. corporations have a Jan-December financial year. From that perspective, there's no TCV that needs to be reversed. By the way, to be absolutely transparent, we have already taken that hit in the ACV that we have announced. Whatever is lost, we've already deducted it from the ACV and TCV that we have announced for the quarter. We already negated that.
Yeah. Mohit, on the operating cash flow, what happened in the first quarter of this year particularly is that, see, this quarter typically has the company performance bonus that we pay to employees and insurance spend that happens, which is a, you can say, once in a year kind of thing. The other aspect is also because of significant fresher addition, we had significant payout on account of the licenses. These three spends basically are, you know, bunched at the start of the year because of which the operating cash flow was lower. There is nothing beyond that, and it is not as if, on the working capital, your question about whether DSO would tend to increase or something is not the reality.
Market is, you know, of a nature that we need to be constantly at this to ensure that customers are adhering to the payment terms we have agreed with them.
Next question is from Girish Pai. Girish, can you unmute yourself please?
Yeah.
Okay, we'll move to the next one. The next question is from Abhishek Bhandari.
Yeah. Hi. Thank you, Sandeep. Sandeep, I have just two small quick questions. First, can we, you know, correlate that lower revenue growth or possibly a decline in your top line is also a lever for margin improvement? Two, if you can update on your M&A thoughts, particularly in Europe, you know, given the significant correction in market valuations. Now I think we are almost, you know, three quarters down from our previous acquisitions.
You know, we should be preparing for the next months. Thank you.
Right. I'll keep it brief. On the lower revenue growth from the top customer margin correlations. There could be a minor impact from that. Although, you know, you don't basically wish it that way. There could be some minor impact there. Now, in terms of M&A, in terms of Europe. We had been saying that overall, we want to pause on the M&A. We want to be able to digest what we have, you know, done in terms of M&A. I'm very happy to say our M&A, whatever we have done, whether it is Data Glove, whether it is, you know, Shri Partners , whether it is SEI, whether it's MediaAgility, all of them have been, you know, going well on the integration path.
Now, in a way, we are getting ready to, you know, go back into the market and look at, you know, targets. Europe will definitely be one area, but we'll be a little cautious about, you know, making sure that we watch the overall conflict in Europe, the macro in Europe. If there are good opportunities in Europe that we can, you know, look at in line with our acquisition strategy, we'll definitely do that. Overall, even otherwise, we'll get active in the M&A market in the next few months.
Next question is from Sandeep Shah.
Thanks for the opportunity. Wanted to understand, if you look at, in FY 2024 industry may witness a demand slowdown. Last time we witnessed the demand slowdown as an industry was FY 2021. In that year, Persistent has done extremely well, and what has gone correct in our favor was a strong positioning on the digital side, which demand has started increasing after the COVID. In FY 2024, the dynamics could be different, where demand on the cost takeout could be higher. On the cost takeout side, I think we are doing extremely well on the enterprise software ISV segment. But are we also having enough positioning in the BFSI and life sciences, or we have to tweak the model? Can you describe that in terms of pipeline of cost takeout deals in all the three segments?
The last question is how to read Salesforce downgrading the guidance, in terms of delay in decision-making. Any impact for us in terms of delay in client package implementation revenues or, Salesforce as a practice for us, both for enterprise client and Salesforce as a client?
Yeah. Let me take the second question first. We have, Sandeep, we have two minutes in the call. I'll try and give you a brief answer on both. As far as Salesforce is concerned, our Salesforce practice is roughly about $130 million today on an annual run rate basis, roughly. This includes Sales Cloud, Service Cloud, Marketing Cloud, you know, MuleSoft, other things, Tableau and so on, so forth. Now, part of the work we do is project-oriented. Part of the work we do is also, you know, do managed services for larger implementations that we have done and that may have been done by others or the customer and so on. As of this point in time, it's too early to say how this will pan out.
As of this point in time, a significant chunk for us is also longer-term contracts. We'll let it pan out. We are watching this carefully as it goes along. Now, FY 2024 versus FY 2021, I do think we have enough capabilities. We have enough, you know, capacity creation that we've done on cost takeout related deals over the last many years. We have the sales leadership, delivery leadership that understands this. Some of the deals that we have done over the last even six to eight quarters have been on these lines. Although the proportion of cost takeout deals have increased in the last one to two quarters and the pipeline is bigger there. Rest assured, we have the capabilities. We understand both the enterprise software and the enterprise world. From that perspective, you know, as a portfolio, I'm pretty confident.
If the industry does X, we'll only do delta X more than that. Hopefully significantly more. With that, I think we should stop here. We are at 7 P.M. Moderator, if we can take one last question, then we'll do the closing comments and go from there.
We will take the last question of Karan Uppal.
Yeah. Thanks. Thanks for the opportunity. Just one question on TCV. Sir, our TCV to TCV ratio has seen a healthy downfall in last eight quarters, which suggests that you are able to win larger engagements with clients. Now, with current macro in mind, do you think this trend will sustain with you winning larger deals? Would be great to hear your thoughts.
Yeah. Our endeavor would be to do larger deals and long-term deals. That is the intent, and we have been improving on it over a period of time. I do think the macro being where it is, it is amenable to doing longer and larger deals. We'll let it pan out, but that's where the whole endeavor is.
Thanks a lot.
With that, we will stop. Moderator, let me just make the closing comments, and then you can do the closure.
Sure. Yes.
As we said before, we have had a good run over the last many quarters, including the last quarter. We'd like to thank our 22,400+ team members, customers, partners, and our investors for their support in our growth journey. We remain optimistic on our prospects for FY 2023 and beyond, even as we are closely watching the macroeconomic developments and staying close to our key customers. We continue to aspire to maintain industry-leading revenue growth combined with healthy levels of profitability. Thank you all for spending time with us on the call today. We wish you the best for the festive season ahead and look forward to connecting with you again in three months to provide an update on our ongoing process. Please stay safe, stay healthy. Thank you.
Thank you very much to the Persistent management. Ladies and gentlemen, on behalf of Persistent Systems Limited, that concludes today's conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines and exit the call. Thank you.
Thank you.