Ladies and gentemen, good day and welcome to Sonata Software Earnings Conference Call for the first quarter of FY26 ended June 30, 2025. We have with us on the call today Samir Dhir, MD and CEO. Jagannathan Chakravarthi N, Chief Financial Officer. We also have our extended leadership team on the call, namely Sujit Mohanty, MD and CEO, SITL Business, Suresh HP, CDO, Rajsekhar Datta Roy, CTO, and Shilpa Kulkarni, Deputy CFO. Please note that all participants' lines will be in listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after management's opening remarks. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please raise your hand from the participant tab on the screen. While asking questions, we request you to please identify yourself and your company. Please note this conference is being recorded.
Please note that during this call, management may make certain forward-looking statements that involve risks, assumptions, and are based on information currently available to management. Sonata does not undertake any obligation to update any such forward-looking statements that may be made in the course of this call. We advise participants to exercise discretion while making any investment decisions. We will begin with opening remarks from CEO, followed by a business overview and financial highlights. After that, we will open the floor for Q&A sessions. With that, I now hand over the call to Samir for his opening remarks. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thank you, Margarita. Welcome, and thank you for joining us today. We value your time and appreciate your continued trust and support. In today's session, we will walk you through Sonata's overall strategy, the progress we have made over the past few quarters, our forward-looking roadmap, and our financial performance for Q1 FY26, which concluded on June 30, 2025. We're excited to share the strong momentum we are building as we execute on our long-term vision and growth aspirations. I'll begin with an update on our strategic priorities and objectives, and then take you through the highlights of our Q1 FY26 performance. Let me start by giving an update on our strategy and goals. At Sonata, our ambition is clear: to be a differentiated modernization engineering firm powered by our proprietary platformization framework, AI-driven solutions, and modern AI-powered accelerators. We are executing at scale across three core strategic dimensions.
Number one, our four focus verticals, which are healthcare and life sciences, banking, financial services, and insurance, retail, manufacturing, and distribution, and technology, media, and telecom. Second, we are focused on five geographies, which are North America, UK, Europe, India, and Australia. And third, we focus on modernization engineering leadership with sustained investments in our IP, proprietary Lightning tools, and robust offerings which are enabling continuous modernization for our clients, building digital AI and data platforms that deliver transformative value. Looking ahead, our aspiration over the next three to five years is to be a consistent top-quartile growth company, helping clients reimagine their business through modernization. We see significant opportunity at the intersection of AI and modernization engineering, which we believe is our pathway to sustainable industry-leading growth. Our recent momentum has been driven by strategic bets we have made. Number one, consistently securing large deals and large accounts.
Number two, expanding significantly in BFSI and HLS, healthcare life sciences, over the last few years. Number three, deepening capabilities in data AI and modernization engineering, backed by our scaling talent across sales, delivery, HR, and finance operations to support our growth ambitions. This progress has come despite significant headwinds, which include ongoing pressure in retail and manufacturing, global retail and manufacturing, budget rationalizations by our large high-tech and banking clients, and SITL's continued impact on IT and ITS business, and potentially Microsoft going direct for large clients and a broader macroeconomic slowdown. Let me provide you an update on these strategy and goals, how we are faring. Our success is anchored on these three pillars, relevantly focused on large deals. In Q1, we won three large deals, underscoring our growing relevance and transformation impact we create for our clients by leveraging AI. Sharp execution across strategic verticals and geographies.
Through our partnership with Microsoft, AWS, and other ecosystem players, we opened seven new enterprise-grade logos in Q1, scaling Sonata for the next phase of growth, which is backed by our continuous investments in AI. In terms of large deals, they remain a cornerstone of our growth strategy, with approximately 45% of our pipeline comprising large and strategic opportunities. I'm pleased to share three marquee wins in Q1, which underscore our AI differentiation in the industry. First win is from a leading BFSI client in lending, who have awarded Sonata a multi-year contract to modernize their core lending platform and cloud infrastructure model transformation. The engagement focuses on enhancing customer experience, reducing technical debt, and driving AI enablement with data-driven insights.
The second large deal is from a global TMT leader, offering software and cloud services, has renewed and expanded their partnership with Sonata with additional budgets during the course of the year. The engagement includes continued engagement for Dynamics, AI, and data. The third win is for a BFSI client to consolidate and modernize their data platform support and core application development. Across these wins, Sonata differentiated through its AI-led transformation approach, integrating modern engineering practices and platform-driven data modernization to create real outcome-driven value for our clients. With that, let me provide you an update on the key AI wins during the course of the quarter. These are significant wins. They are not large, but they are very strategic for our go-forward build-out of Sonata. The first win on AI is with a global agriculture leader who has awarded Sonata a multi-year engagement to establish an AI co-innovation lab.
The initiative will drive AI product development for their enterprise platform, including custom copilots tailored for their trading desks. The second win, we have secured with a large Europe-based client to transform their digital acquisition strategy from search engine optimization to answer engine optimization. The solution will shift customer focus, customer experience from ranked search listings to position zero-zero answers, delivering a single, highly relevant response, boosting engagement and conversion. With that, let me provide you an update on the verticals in GEOS and SITL. We remain confident on our investment verticals, which are healthcare, life sciences, and banking financial services. We are on track to scale to $250 million in revenue over the next three to five years' time for these two verticals combined.
Together, these two verticals now contribute to over 30% of our total revenue, a sharp increase from 13% just three years ago, a clear reflection of our strategic focus and disciplined execution. On the SITL front, we are making strong progress across our four strategic growth bets, new partnerships and wins with AWS, Google, and Oracle, scaling our security operations center for India-based clients, accelerating growth through Microsoft SMC channel, winning large integrated SI deals that combine platform, engineering, and services. These strategic bets for SITL are helping us build a more diversified, resilient, and future-ready business. With that, let me provide you an update on our capabilities and talent. For AI, we expect AI-enabled services to contribute 20% of Sonata's revenue over the next three years, reflecting our strong market traction and focused execution.
We're actively pursuing AI opportunities across 100-plus clients, helping them unlock operational efficiencies, enhance customer experience, and transform their business models through AI innovation. AI is deeply embedded in our strategy and operations. We are driving momentum across three key dimensions, which are engineering, industry solutions, and internal operations. Let me provide an update on these three dimensions of AI. On AI-led engineering, through our proprietary Harmony.AI Workbench, we are embedding AI into client delivery and measurable outcomes. IntelliQA, an automated platform for test case generation, is improving, helping our clients improve both speed and quality. We deliver solutions across BFSI, retail, and high-tech clients across the globe. Industry differentiation through focus IP, we continue to lead with platform-led agentic AI offerings tailored for industry contexts. We launched AgentBridge recently, making Sonata one of the first mid-tier firms with enterprise-grade agentic AI workflows.
We are seeing strong momentum in customer service, decision automation, and data enrichment, with clients increasingly co-innovating with us. We are on our way to become an AI-first enterprise. We are driving AI adoption within Sonata as well. We rolled out Sonata GPT for our HR and support companion for internal functions. We have launched bots for policy access, internal automation queries, and developer productivity tools. In terms of AI partnerships, we are cementing our position at the forefront of enterprise AI through meaningful partnerships. Wharton AI Analytics Initiative, Sonata is a thought leadership partner with Wharton, collaborating on the next-gen agentic AI research and governance. Locally in India, we have formed a partnership with IISc, advancing our credibility in deep tech AI innovation and applied research. Our AI-first strategy is core for our Sonata's transformation as we move forward.
We are really excited about the road ahead on AI for us. With that, let me provide you an update on talent and leadership capability. In terms of talent and workforce metrics, our active headcount increased to 6,859, up from 6,619 in Q1 FY25. Our LTM attrition is at 16%. Our gender diversity remains strong at 31%. Despite challenging macroeconomic conditions, we remain committed to our future-focused talent, investments, and support our growth ambitions. We have continued to strengthen our sales leadership. We recently hired Head of Retail and Manufacturing Vertical in the US and also Head of BFSI Vertical in the US. Upscaling to Sonata University, that continues to power our upscaling agenda with a focus on AI readiness. 93.5% of our workforce is now trained on AI, reflecting our commitment to building an AI-ready organization.
With that, let me provide you an update on the industry information we got in the quarter. We were named among the ET best organization to work for in 2025 in Q1. In addition, we featured in Marksmen Daily as most preferred workplace for 2025-26. We also were rated by HFS Research. They ranked us among the fastest five service providers by revenue growth for Q1 2025. Despite the macroeconomic conditions, we are implementing our annual compensation plans, revision plans for our team members globally. The process starts in the current quarter, which is Q2. We continue to invest in our talent through our leading people engagement and learning and development initiatives. With that, let me provide you an update on Q1 FY26 performance. Before I get into numbers, let me talk about the tailwinds and the headwinds we are seeing in the business.
In terms of tailwinds during the quarter, we benefited from three growth drivers. Number one, we announced a large deal in the April timeframe for our TMT client. That is now nearly ramping up or ramped up, and that expanded our growth during the course of the quarter. Our continued strength in healthcare, life sciences, and BFSI is continuing to help us gain market share in these two verticals. And our strong performance in data and AI-led deal wins is reflecting our growth, strong growth demand environment. The headwinds impacting our performance, we are navigating through some challenges, specifically around global softness in retail manufacturing and distribution after the tariffs were announced and with client uncertainty driven by those tariffs and regulatory changes in this vertical. Secondly, two of our large clients, one BFSI client and one high-tech client, are seeing budgetary pressures and cost control pressures right now.
This discretionary spend is under pressure there. And lastly, slowdown in ITL, ITS sector, and SITL, including potential risk associated with a couple of large accounts where the partner wants to go direct engagement model with our customers. With that, let me get to the numbers. International services business, our revenue grew 0.6% quarter on quarter, reflecting resilience amid mixed market conditions. Order bookings stood at $105 million, representing 1.28 book-to-bill ratio. We secured three large deals in Q1. The number of clients with more than $10 million annual run rate is now seven. AI-led order booking grew significantly from previous quarter. Our pipeline for AI is now at nearly about $46 million in Q1. In terms of profitability and delivery, our EBITDA improved marginally to 16.6%, up from 16.5% in the prior quarter. The utilization remains stable, around 86%.
SITL, the gross contribution declined 12.6% quarter on quarter, largely due to IT and ITS sector softness. In summary, Sonata delivered a resilience performance in Q1 FY26 with 0.6% growth in international services and marginal improvement in EBITDA. We secured three large deals, grew our AI-led order booking, and now have seven new clients, and in addition, we have seven clients with more than 10 million run rate. Our long-term ambition to be a differentiated modernization engineering firm powered by AI and modern technologies continues to drive momentum. The key growth drivers continue to be TMT, BFSI, healthcare, and our large deals momentum. The headwinds continue to be from retail manufacturing and select large clients of Sonata. With that, let me thank all the Sonata teams globally for their dedication, and we remain confident in delivering long-term value to our clients, partners, and shareholders.
Their efforts are the foundation of our progress and our future success. With that, let me hand it over to Jagannathan to walk you through our financial performance. Jagannathan.
Thank you, Samir, for the overview. Good morning, good afternoon, good evening, everyone. Let me walk you through our financial performance for the quarter ending 30th June 2025. First, starting with the international services. International services, the revenue in USD remained at 81.8%. I'm sorry to interrupt you.
Sir, I would request you to come closer and closer to the mic and speak, please, because your audio is feeble right now.
So in Q1 2026, USD reported revenues stood at $81.8 million, a growth of 0.6% quarter on quarter, and a degrowth of 1.1% year on year. In constant currency terms, it represents a degrowth of 0.9% quarter on quarter and 2.4% year on year.
Repeated revenue stood at INR 699.9 crores, showing a degrowth of 0.3% quarter on quarter and 1.8% year on year. EBITDA for the Q1 26 stood at 16.6%, which was a small improvement of 10 basis points compared to Q4. Q1 reported PAT stood at INR 70.7 crores against Q4 PAT of INR 62.3 crores. The ROCE RONW for the quarter remains at 14.7% and 20.9% respectively. Our DSO for Q1 international business is reported at 62 days. To update the Quant team about the performance of Quant and the earn-out payment. Quant team has exceeded the original estimated performance, and we have signed a new contract incremental performance obligation and rolled over our revised estimate to the new contract. Now, let me provide an update on domestic business. Domestic business revenue for Q1 26 stood at INR 2,274.7 crores, a growth of 18.6% quarter on quarter and 23% year on year.
Gross contribution for Q1 stood at INR 68.5 crores, which was a degrowth of 12.6% quarter on quarter and a flat year on year. PAT for Q1 26 stood at INR 38.6 crores against INR 45.2 crores in Q5, with a degrowth of 14.6% quarter on quarter and a degrowth of 4.6% year on year. DSO for Q1 26 is 63 days as compared to 43 days in Q4 25. This has a seasonal impact for this quarter. Last year, same period was also the DSO was 65 days, and also, because of the nature of business, it's a little change there. The billing happened towards the end of the quarter, which also led to the incremental DSO in this quarter. The ROCE and RONW for the quarter stood at 33.6% and 32.5% respectively.
On the consolidated business, the revenue stood at INR 2,965.2 crores, a growth of 13.3% quarter on quarter and 17.3% year on year. PAT before exceptional item, the consolidated business stood at INR 109.3 crores against INR 107.5 crores in Q4 2025, reflecting a growth of 1.7% quarter on quarter and 3.5% year on year. The consolidated EPS for Q1 was ₹3.94 per share. It has increased by 1.8% quarter on quarter. The overall consolidated ROCE and RONW stood at 18.5% and 24% respectively. A quick update on cash flow. Cash and cash equivalent stood at INR 600 crores at the end of Q1 2026, against INR 707 crores in Q4 2025. This temporary dip is due to final tranche payment of Quant earn-out and also incremental loan repayment installment in this quarter. The quarter one, end of quarter one 2026, the net cash balance stood at negative INR 62.5 crores.
For the, we have also taken an additional loan of $35 million during this quarter for helping us to pay the Quant earn-out. I would like to update you on this RBI issue on which we were working for a long time now. This issue has been resolved. This will now help us to move the money between the entities, Sonata entities, helping us to invest, helping us to gather the investment required for the growth of the business in the coming days. The Company has declared its first interim dividend of ₹1.25 per share, and the Company expects to pay quarterly interim dividend from this year. Update on our operating metrics, business operating performance. Total headcount moved to 6,810 compared to 6,859 at the end of, sorry, to correct it, the total headcount moved from 6,810 in Q4 to 6,859 by end of Q1 26.
Our attrition for the quarter looks at 16%. The onsite offshore revenue mix was 47 to 53 in Q1 compared to 51 to 49 in Q4. Utilization is 86.6% in this quarter, which is a marginal drop compared to Q4. We have added seven new customers in Q1. Top 10 client contributed revenue share of 56% in this quarter compared to 61% last quarter. Number of clients with more than $5 million run rate of revenue have increased to 13 in Q1 26 as against 11 in Q4 25. Q1 order book stood at $105 million with a book-to-bill ratio of 1.28x. In summary, we remain confident in our long-term strategy and committed to drive a sustainable growth and the shareholder value. Thank you for this opportunity for us with this and over the call to moderator for question and answer.
Thank you very much, sir.
We will now begin with the question and answer session. If you wish to ask a question on audio, please press star and one on your touch-tone phone. If you wish to withdraw yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. If you're connected on the webcast and would like to ask a question, please click on the ask a question tab. And separately, you can also type in your text question mentioned below the video player. You may please press star and one to ask a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may please press star and one on their touch-tone phone. The first question is from the line of Praveen Kumar from Equitas Capital Advisors. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. Thanks for the opportunity.
I had a couple of questions. The first one was that I think over the last few quarters, given the increasing uncertainties in international business, you have stayed away from a guidance of a concrete number and shifted more towards saying that we'll keep a top quartile growth kind of scenario, right? So just wanted to understand the thought process behind this, that on one hand, you have been recording robust deal wins, right? But on the other hand, I understand that you are facing pressure from some of the top customers. So just wanted to understand the thought process that at what point of time would you be comfortable giving a more concrete kind of guidance?
Yeah, very helpful, Samir, looking back at that. I think you're right, Praveen. We have been, like I said earlier, we have tailwinds and headwinds.
The tailwind continues to be our large deal win, and the tailwinds continue to be our growth in healthcare and banking. But we also have headwinds, much like with the industry. We are seeing continued pressure from retail manufacturing clients, and also two of our large clients are under discretionary budget cuts significantly. So the large deal win ends up offsetting the run-offs we see from some of these clients and the retail manufacturing industry. In the past, we never gave guidance. I think last year was the first time we gave guidance for two quarters because of a variety of reasons, but I don't think we plan to give guidance, forward-looking guidance. Our vision remains and our strategy remains clear that as we execute forward, we want to be in the top quartile performance. If you take a look at the mid-tier segment, there are about 20 companies.
We think we'll be in the top five or six from a growth rate perspective. In some quarters, we will make it. Some quarters, we will not make it. We are not consistent there right now, but our objective is to keep working towards consistently staying in the top quartile as well.
I understand. In the previous quarter, you had said that in terms of the large client rundown, you said that we should be, I mean, seeing probably the end of it and maybe even the largest client with whom we had issues should come back to growth maybe from a Q2 kind of a time frame. So any update on that? Are we still maintaining that, or are there further challenges you see?
So, for the two large clients where we have softness right now going on, the high-tech client, their budget cycle starts in first July, so they're just finishing up their budgets. The budgets are still not rolled out. So, I think later this quarter, we'll get more clarity as to how we'll catch some additional budgets to get back on growth. Right now, the budgets are still getting rolled out, so they've not done the process. And for the banking client, the large banking client, we'll continue to see some headwinds there as well. I think we'll have more clarity in the second half of this quarter, and when we can get back in October, November time frame with you, we'll provide more updates. But right now, we're just cautiously watching. They definitely have some budgetary pressures, both these large clients.
I understand.
And in terms of the challenges from Microsoft going direct in the domestic part of the business, can you give us some further updates on that? Has the thought process evolved on that? Has Microsoft got some traction on that? I mean, if you could give us some kind of an update on that.
We have not yet got an update from them because this is a broad global decision for them. And in the implementation, we have not yet got the final decision from them. We may have impact on one of the largest customers this year, but the decision is still pending. However, Samir has articulated about what are the other things we are doing to manage the risk. We are prepared for it, whatever changes come.
There can be a short-term impact, but we will try to have our risk management steps will help us to catch up in the medium term.
I understand, but when you say a short-term impact, internally, are you looking at, I mean, through these various mitigating measures, including approaching other larger tech players, are you looking at an impact of a few quarters in terms of the gross contribution, or what are we looking at? Internally, what are you looking at?
It's a good question, but I don't have an answer for it now because it depends on where we land, what happens in this. One end of it has completely become zero. The other end, as we get back the deal completely, but life is somewhere in between. We have to wait and watch what happens in this.
Then only we will be able to give a view about where we land. I understand, but in terms of what we were providing to, I mean, in terms of going direct versus going through you, you would have a clear idea of what you are providing. And I'm sure there have been conversations with these customers, and you would have an assessment of whether they're likely to go direct, right?
Still, there's no decision. It's pending from them, both from customer as well as from the partner. We are still discussing with them. If the decision is there, I would have given it. There's no reason for me to not give it. I understand. The decision is still pending. It is still work in progress, and nothing has been decided till date.
I understand. Thanks for the response.
Thank you.
The next question is from the line of Ashish Dash from Mirae Asset Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. Question is on the BSS vertical. So you mentioned that one of your top clients in banking vertical is facing some issues. But mostly what I understand is that in Q4, the decline in the BSS vertical was due to the seasonality in the Quant, and it usually bounces back. So just could you just let us know how the Quant account has done in Q1, and what we are expecting from the BSS vertical from next quarter onwards? So because that is one which usually drives the growth. So just more color on that BSS vertical.
Yeah. So I think overall, we are quite happy with the progress we made in the last several quarters on BSS vertical.
I think we just announced one large deal as well with the BFSI vertical with another banking client. So I think the overall progress on the banking side is reasonably good. This one large client of banking, which is the largest client of banking for us, has had challenges. They had a seasonal impact first in our Q4 quarter and then an ongoing budgetary pressure that we have seen going into Q1 and even continuing to Q2. So we are watching the situation at this point in time. We'll keep you updated. But in general, the banking industry has done well. But because it's a large client in the banking sector for us, we're just watching that. And that's why we just wanted to notify you that we are seeing pressure come through on this banking client.
So we are expecting growth from next quarter onwards, or do you see that the softness would continue in the banking?
We're just waiting for more clarity from this client right now because they have been, especially this particular client, they've been on a budget shrinkage for the last two quarters. As we move forward, we'll probably learn more and we'll update you. But at this point in time, we don't have a line of sight as to how their budget situation evolves for Q2 and our Q3 and Q4. I think that's something that we are just working with them at this point. They've had changes. They've had budget pressures going on internally. So we're just waiting and watching right now as to how they want to do their discretionary spend in the coming part of the year.
Okay. So another vertical, TMT.
So we own a large deal and that ramped up. So we see some growth, sequential growth in the TMT vertical. But last quarter, I think we mentioned that the more growth will come, the deal would be fully ramped up in Q2. So any change? So how is the progress? Are we expecting more growth in the TTT vertical in Q2? That's one. And second, HLS vertical, we saw the growth. What is the reason for that?
Yeah. So let me take the second part first, and I'll let Jagannathan answer the first part. So in healthcare, our growth is primarily driven, to understand it, in two dimensions. So one, we have made quite a lot of progress in the pharma side, pharmacy side of the business. The pharma side of the business, I think we have seen new logos open up.
We have been able to disintermediate and dislodge the existing vendor system, and that's largely on the data and AI space, so we're pretty enthused about the progress we made on the healthcare side of the equation on the pharma side. On the health tech side as well, we have been really building platforms for them using modern technologies, modern engineering, and AI again, so I think we've made, in general, quite a lot of progress on both health tech side as well as the pharma side of the healthcare, largely in the data and AI space, enabling the growth. To your first question, sorry, can you just repeat the first part? I forgot. Can you just repeat the first part of the question?
Yeah. My question is on the TMT.
So we own a large deal on the TMT vertical, and I understood that last time you mentioned that some of the revenue would come in Q1, but the deal would be fully ramped up in Q2. So we'll see strong growth in TMT vertical from Q2 onwards, if I remember correctly. So I want to understand that the growth momentum would remain very strong in Q2 for the TMT?
Yeah. So I think the large deal, if we want, I think it's predominantly ramped up right now. I think in Q2, we'll see a large chunk of it already there. There's some parts which will probably trigger into Q3, but a large chunk of it is getting ramped up in the current quarter, as well as the deal that we announced in April time frame, if that's your question.
There are other deals that we are pursuing in TMT as well. Hopefully, as we close them out, that will continue to drive growth. In general, if you keep the single largest account that we have had pressure and headwinds in the last three or four quarters, if you keep that aside, in general, we are pretty optimistic about the growth pattern in the TMT vertical.
Okay. And just on the TMT vertical, I just had another question. You have mentioned the deal usually in your presentation, you always mention about the deep deal pipeline in the fabric and dynamics. And how those deal pipelines are converting to the deal, and those TCVs are also just give us more color on how those TCVs are converting into the revenue. So how your relationship with the large customer in the TMT vertical is progressing on those areas?
Yeah.
So I think there are two parts of this question. So as far as sell with the large tech customers concerned, I think we are making reasonably good progress. Of course, the deal cycles are elongated right now. The deals that we're closing in two quarters now are probably closing in three quarters, but the pipeline is pretty robust. So we are continuing to make progress on the sell with side when we sell along with the technology partner. I think we're making good progress on Dynamics as well as the Power Apps, Power Platform side, with an exception of retail manufacturing. So retail manufacturing in general is soft, and it continues to be soft for us in the partnership ecosystem for this as well.
But if you back out retail manufacturing vertical, I think in general, we made good progress with the partner as far as sell with is concerned.
Okay. Got it. Thank you so much for taking my questions.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Amit Chandra from HDFC Securities. Please go ahead. Yeah. Thanks for the opportunity. So my question is on continuation to the TMT vertical. So is it right to assume that most of the incremental revenue that we are seeing on the TMT is coming from the large deal ramp-up? And if I see the dynamics that have been on a declining phase and ex of the large deal, how to see the TMT vertical?
And also in terms of the deals that we have announced, if I see the TCV number that we report, the book to bill, that is indicating a flat YY kind of a TCV number. So how to read that? So this is the first question.
Yeah. So like I said, the TMT large deal that we announced in April is nearly ramped up. And that has really helped us offset some of the headwinds from retail manufacturing vertical and the largest tech customer. I think that's really how this has played out for us. But the deal that is pretty much, I would say, about 70%-80% fully ramped up at this point in time. And I think there are more opportunities in TMT vertical. So we're generally speaking quite optimistic about it.
But the Dynamics part to the question that we just answered, I think if you back out the retail part of the Dynamics that has really dragged us. Historically, retail was about 40, 40, 45% of the business, which is now close to about 30% of the business because retail has been on the decline for us. If you back that out, we're making good progress in Dynamics, but with the whole picture of retail included, it is under pressure right now in the Dynamics business.
Okay. And so secondly, on the BFSI vertical, obviously, you said that there is a specific client issue and headwind there. But if I see the last two quarters, the BFSI revenue is down by around 35-36%. And also you mentioned that I assume that this client is from the Quant acquisition.
And in terms of the renewed deal that we had with Quant, that assumes that the Quant targets are being met. So how to read this? On one side, the top client for Quant is declining, and on one side, we are renewing the earnouts target for Quant, if you can explain that.
Yeah. Okay. So the Quant earnout, what has happened up to calendar year 2024, which was as per the original agreement, they have exceeded the target, whatever we have agreed for. We have renewed the agreement for three more years with the incremental target, and whatever is payable is going to be when the incremental target is being met. Having said this, we were talking about the BFSI customer. Yes, there's some budgetary pressure with this BFSI customer. We are waiting for more clarity and more opportunity. Opportunities are continuing to exist.
We will focus on and leveraging this opportunity. We have to wait and see. Maybe in a quarter or two, we will come to know where we are standing on that. But having said that, they are not one customer base alone. They have other many customers out there. We are waiting for the growth to resume for them.
So Jagannathan, if you can share what is the earnouts and how it will be placed over the next two to three years and what are the good estimates in terms of targets that we have for Quant for the earnouts to materialize?
Not exactly. I mean, it's a little confidential at present. We will not be able to share the details.
Okay. And secondly, on the margin side, how do you see the margins panning out?
Obviously, we have been operating at pretty high margins earlier, but now it has been reset to around 16%-17%. Earlier, we had a target of scaling up to 19%-20% earlier. So where it stands right now in terms of margins, what are the margin tailwinds that we see from here? And in the industry scenario, do you see this is the new normal in terms of margins?
Yeah. We are continuously working on improving the margins with the various accounts. We are waiting once the revenue growth reasonably stabilizes and we have overcome some uncertainties in the market that will help us along with the various other factors. We continue to focus on this. It may take a couple of more quarters for us.
We have mentioned that we will be able to come closer to 20% margin, not 20, closer to 20% margin by the end of the year. We continue to believe in that. And we will give you a post-check if there is any other new development happen. But as of today, we are continuing to focus on reaching the coming closer to 20% margin by the end of the year.
So any color if you can give because 20% is quite high from where we are currently. So what will drive this margins? Whether it will be operating leverage or it is some kind of cost cutting that we're looking at?
So this is a different picture already. We are continuously working on it.
One of the factors what we mentioned about the large deal ramping up, that will also help us to bring the change of mix. If you see that there is a change in the mix of on-site offshore mix for us, this will continue to help us to grow. We will also improve on utilization. So that will also help us to do it. There are many other factors, including pyramid. We are working on various other aspects of it coming.
Okay. Okay, sir. Thank you for all the questions. Yes.
Thank you. A reminder to all the participants that you may please press star and one to ask questions. You may also ask questions through webcast by clicking on the ask a question tab. We'll move on to our next question, which is from the line of Dipesh Mehta from Emkay Global. Please go ahead. Yeah.
Thanks for the opportunity. First question about the Quant. Can you give us the number? Cash payment paid for the earnout in this quarter. So if you can give that number. Second thing is you said some revised amended agreement for three years. Now, we have made some provision for additional performance target for Quant. Those additional target has not been met. So do we expect any reversal of those earnout or that reversal is unlikely to take place because we have signed new agreements? If you can provide that clarity. That is on Quant. Second question is about the gross contribution weakness in domestic business. It is a bit surprise. IT and ITES softness is there for now last many quarters. We are seeing sudden decline in gross contribution.
So if you can provide some more details because it seems to be a bit unusual and that weakness is nothing specific for this quarter. If you can give some clarity. Third question is about TMT. We have signed $73 million deal in this quarter. If you can provide some sense about how that deal is likely to ramp up. And I presume it is separate than the April month which the deal we signed. So TMT might have some better benefit from this new deal ramp-up as well entering into next three quarters. Thank you.
So Dipesh, on the just to clarify to you on the payment, whatever was the balance amount to be paid to Quant promoters, shareholders originally agreed has been paid. This has been disclosed earlier also. What is the total consideration we are paid and what has been paid earlier?
The second element to this is Quant.
Can you give that number? Let's say in this quarter, what is the absolute number?
This is, we have made the payment, whatever is the balance payment, and this has been total consideration as mentioned, Dipesh. I will avoid mentioning about the numbers now because this is not being disclosed in financials anywhere, I have to say. The second element to this is you are asking about the reversal of provision. I have mentioned in my call that we have done a rollover for considering the new contract what we have entered with them for three years. So the rollover captures that we may not have any reversals coming in for them. Third about the.
So Sujit Mohanty, just comment on the SIT, then I'll pick up the TMT question. Hello. Go ahead, Sujit.
There are two or three points on this why there is a gross contribution decline compared to the last quarter. So what is that? As you know, we have almost 80%-90% dependency on the cloud now. And in the cloud, the concept is land and expand. So if you see many of our large deals, historically, they come in third and fourth quarter. That's why always there is a little bit heaviness for the last two quarters. And then many of these large deals we are working on since last two to three years to build up some of the programmatic revenue earning, which happened during the Q4 of FY25. So we had a very heavy effect in Q4 during the last financial year.
So compared to that, currently, because of the understanding which is there in the market that one of the OEM is planning to go direct, we wanted to build up some of the risk mitigation mechanism. And one of them was to acquire more platforms, which will help us to recover in future. So when you do that, and this is not because it's a worldwide phenomenon, most of the.
I'm sorry to interrupt you. Sir, your audio is muffled a little bit.
So it is not only us. Most of the LSPs today are trying to acquire businesses, expecting that the OEM is going to go direct, and many of them are going to lose some of the business, possibly. So because of that, there is a price sensitiveness because everybody is trying to acquire new customers, new business.
And because of that, there has been a pressure on the margin. So because of these few things, even if our revenue has gone up in this quarter, our margins have remained a little bit soft. But we believe that with these new customers with us, we'll be able to work on them. And as I said, the fact that we have landed with many of the new customers, we'll be able to expand our engagement with them, and the margins is expected to go up in future. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Sujit. The third part of your question was on TMT deal. I think, like I said earlier, the $73 million deal we announced in April is now nearly ramped up. There are some parts of it which will probably trickle over into Q3.
But in this current quarter, due to the course of the quarter, it will get nearly ramped up. So the three parts of your question.
No. So just to clarify, in quarter one, FY26, international IT press release, you mentioned seven new customers were added during the quarter, including mega deal of $73 million. It pertains to quarter four, or this is new deal we signed?
So there are two different data points. Please clarify that. So the seven new customers that we have signed are outside of the large deal. Those new customers are going to ramp up in Q2, Q3, and Q4. Those are newer customers. They will scale gradually. So that's sort of point number one. Point number two, on the large deal that we announced probably in April timeframe, that started ramping up from May onwards, is now nearly fully ramped up.
There is some staffing that we still have to do, which will probably go in August, September, and maybe in October. That is more or less at this point in time fully in the run rate numbers for Q2. When we come to announce the Q2 results in October, it'll probably be nearly fully ramped up by that time. I hope that answers the question.
O kay. And if I can squeeze in last question, we indicated about wage hike. If you can give some sense about how we intend to implement it, whether it would be staggered or it would be fully implemented in quarter two and likely impact on margin. Thanks.
Yeah. The junior management and middle management, we will implement it from August 1st in Q2. We are giving the salary increase from August 1st. For the senior management, it will be from October 1st.
So the impact on the margin will be similar to what we have done in the past, last year also. Whatever we have mentioned as an increment amount, same thing we are also targeting to have it at the same levels.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Suraj Malu. Mr. Malu, I have unmuted your line. Kindly proceed. Introduce yourself and kindly proceed.
Yeah. Hi, sir. This is Suraj from Catamaran. My first question is on the number of clients in three to five million bucket. It has decreased from 10 to 6 quarter over quarter. So can you throw some light on that?
So the customers with more than 5 million have improved. Some of them have moved to the more than 5 million also. And some of the projects, the run rate has come in the three to five million category.
There is a small dip in that. Some have moved up in the level, and a few have come down a little less in the revenue. That is why the drop is there. Nothing operational is just a project completion or completion of the existing run rate for a customer. That's it.
Got it. Because the decrease in four clients, two can be attributed to increase in the five million bucket. The balance two.
It is a shift in the course of the business only. There is nothing alarming or nothing specifically that we have lost or something like this. In the course of the normal business, some proje
cts get over. Got it. And the second question is the QOQ increase in TMT revenue is 15%. So what would this growth be if one were to remove the degrowth from the top client?
What is your question?
So the top client revenue has degrown this quarter as well, right? But whereas the revenue from TMT segment has grown 15% quarter on quarter. So what is this actual number if one were to remove the degrowth from the top client?
So this is also we are mentioning about the mega deal, right? The ramping up of the mega deal has benefited some amount majorly for this vertical. It will continue to have benefit in Q2 also. The ramping up is continuing. So both the quarters will be a benefit for that.
Got it. So I meant how much was the decline in the Microsoft revenue this quarter?
Nothing specifically. At present, it's looking very flat, the revenue. We are waiting for the new budgetary amount to be rolled out by the customer. We are waiting for that. It's not yet concluded.
Got it. Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
The next question is from the line of Dipesh Mehta from Invesco. Please go ahead.
So if you can just give some context regarding the BFSI growth, beyond one of the BFSI stocks, do we think this vertical can come back to growth? I mean, will Quant scale up fast enough to offset that impact going forward? That's it.
Yeah. So in general, we are quite reasonably optimistic about our BFSI growth. However, having said that, we are seeing headwinds in the largest BFSI clients. So we have to manage that because there is a concentration of a large client in those BFSI numbers. But if you back out one single client, large client where we are seeing headwinds, I think in general, we'll see good momentum in the course of the year from BFSI. It's a solitary client issue that we are facing. Go ahead, please.
Also, if I'm not wrong, this client is a large bank. Am I correct?
It's a large BFSI client, yes.
It's a large U.S. bank. That's what I'm asking. Yes.
A large U.S. BFSI client, yes. So net-net, including this bank, the growth is still unclear, but if you factor in this large client, for further decline could be possible, Quant still not will be able to offset it, right? That is first. And second, for T&M, I think MSFT budget, Microsoft budgets are only the key call here. And whatever ramp-up is going to happen, right? Before you say, the BFSI minus this large client where we are seeing softness right now, I think will be on the growth side. However, the impact of degrowth from this large client is yet to be certain.
We're just working with them to understand what impact they're going to have in the remaining part of the year. We cannot answer that question. But minus of this one large client in BFSI, we think we'll continue to do well in BFSI. On the TMT side, like Jagannathan said, the largest tech client that we have, they are flattish at this point in time. Minus of that, we are seeing good momentum in TMT as well.
Okay. Thanks. If I can ask one more, just one more question.
Go ahead.
Okay, so if you look at retail and manufacturing, are we expecting further headwinds here, or how is that looking? That's one. And for the healthcare, so.
So let me answer retail manufacturing.
I think it's been quite a tough period for retail vertical for us for the last, especially two to three quarters since the time tariffs got announced. We don't believe the impact is still fully behind us. We are cautiously watching. At this point in time, we are talking to our clients, making sure that we stand by them in these days and times. It is still unclear as to what the impact of retail manufacturing could be further. But we have seen quite a lot of headwinds in the last two to three quarters for sure. As far as the healthcare is concerned, I think, like I said earlier, the pharma and healthtech has done well. So overall, in healthcare, we see positive momentum go forward as well.
Thanks. Thanks a lot.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Dipesh Mehta from Emkay Global.
Please go ahead.
Yeah. Just one question on overall, let's say, growth momentum perspective. This year in international IT, we have a negative YoY growth. Are we confident this year likely to be a positive growth year for us, or we think the headwinds are fairly high and difficult to predict kind of thing? Thank you.
So just to correct it, for FY25, we did not have a negative growth. I don't know on what basis you are saying that.
Anyway, I am referring to quarter one YoY growth.
YoY. Okay. Quarter one YoY growth, there was a negative growth. But for the overall year, we still expect with the kind of order book momentum, we will be able to get a growth. Having said that, there are enough Samir has mentioned about the uncertainties in the business.
We have to wait and watch how it develops in the course of this year. As of now, with the order book based on order book momentum, we are confident of giving a positive growth.
Like we articulated it just a bit of. So for T5. The headwinds and the tailwinds clearly to you. So I think our tailwinds continue to be healthcare vertical. Our tailwinds continue to be data and AI side. Our headwinds continue to be our largest tech client and largest BFSI client and retail manufacturing. I think we're just trying to balance out the positives, the negatives, and it's an evolving situation, candidly. As you know, tariffs are being signed off by countries and by sectors almost on a weekly basis right now. So as things settle down, we'll provide an update.
But this is a very evolving situation, especially on the retail manufacturing side and the two large clients of Sonata. Go ahead, please.
Mr. Mehta, do you have any further questions?
Nothing.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question for today. I would now like to hand the conference over to the management for closing comments. Thank you and over to you, sir.
Thank you, Peter. And thank everybody for joining the call today. We remain from a long-term perspective, build up a modernization powerhouse in Sonata. We're working towards that. In the recent past, because of the industry headwinds and sectoral headwinds, we are cautiously.
I'm sorry, sir. You're not audible right now. You're on mute.
I just want to thank you, Operator, for orchestrating the call and also participants who joined and their interest in Sonata.
Like I said, there are strong positives in the business, especially around healthcare and banking, strong positives in the large deal momentum, strong positives in AI, but equally, we have headwinds with retail manufacturing vertical and the two large clients of Sonata. I think the management team and all of us are really working judiciously to navigate the positives, maximize the positives, and reduce the negatives, and we'll keep you updated as we make progress and update you as we move forward. Thank you for your time today. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you, members of the management. Ladies and gentlemen, on behalf of Sonata Software, that concludes this conference. We thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.