Veteran traders can spot a certain type of market day right away: a calm, deliberate repricing that occurs when a company tells the truth and the truth wasn’t what anyone wanted to hear, rather than a crash caused by panic or external shock. For HCL Technologies, Wednesday, April 22 was that kind of day. The IT company with its headquarters in Noida announced its Q4 FY2026 results on Tuesday after market hours. The stock had already dropped by almost 10% by Wednesday morning at 9:18. By the afternoon, it had reached ₹1,281, a 52-week low, on the day that the results were expected to show resiliency.
On the surface, the numbers themselves did not appear to be disastrous. At ₹4,488 crore, net profit increased 4.20 percent over the previous year. Operational revenue increased by 12.34 percent to ₹33,981 crore. Those are respectable figures in most situations. However, markets trade on what is anticipated to happen next rather than what actually happened, and the real harm was done by HCLTech’s forward guidance. In terms of constant currency, the company anticipated revenue growth of only 1 to 4 percent in FY2027. That range landed like a door closing rather than a window opening for a company that investors had been pricing for significantly more. The wide range was ascribed by management to two particular client situations where ramp-downs are anticipated, decreased discretionary spending from clients, and market volatility. The environment, according to CEO C Vijayakumar, is one of uncertain demand. In its own words, the market concurred.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | HCL Technologies Limited |
| Stock Symbol | NSE: HCLTECH / BSE: 532281 |
| Founded | November 12, 1991 |
| Headquarters | Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India |
| Founder | Shiv Nadar |
| CEO | C Vijayakumar (since October 21, 2016) |
| Parent Organization | HCL Enterprise |
| Employees | 226,640 (2025) |
| Market Capitalization | ~₹3.48–3.53 Trillion |
| Current Share Price | ₹1,289.10 (April 22, 2026, falling session) |
| 52-Week High | ₹1,780.10 |
| 52-Week Low | ₹1,281.00 (hit intraday April 22) |
| P/E Ratio | 20.3–21.19 |
| Dividend Yield | ~4.16–4.20% |
| Q4 FY2026 Net Profit | ₹4,488 crore (+4.20% YoY) |
| Q4 FY2026 Revenue | ₹33,981 crore (+12.34% YoY) |
| Q4 FY2026 Revenue (USD) | $3,682 million (missed consensus by ~1.7%) |
| Q4 FY2026 EBIT Margin | 16.5% (missed consensus of 17.6%) |
| Net New Deal Wins (Q4) | $1.9 billion (down 35% YoY) |
| FY2027 Revenue Guidance | 1%–4% growth in constant currency |
| Annualized Advanced AI Revenue | $620 million (Q4) |
| Global Offices | 60 countries |
| Key Subsidiaries | Actian, GUVI, Unica Corporation, HCL America |

On Wednesday morning, three particular figures went around analyst desks, all of which were worse than the consensus had anticipated. Dollar-wise, Q4 revenue was $3,682 million, nearly twice as much as the consensus estimate of a 1.6 percent quarterly decline. The EBIT margin came in at 16.5 percent, which is 110 basis points lower than the consensus estimate of 17.6 percent. This indicates that the company hasn’t completely controlled cost pressures. It is more difficult to determine whether HCLTech is losing ground in the competition for new business or if this is a pause that will normalize over the upcoming quarters. Net new deal wins of $1.9 billion represented a 35 percent year-over-year decline. The market capitalization was destroyed by ₹37,652 crore in a single day due to the genuine uncertainty surrounding the guidance range.
Alongside the pessimistic narrative, there is another one that should be acknowledged without being used as an excuse for the bad news. In Q4, HCLTech’s annualized Advanced AI revenue surpassed $620 million. In a market that every Indian IT company is attempting to enter, that is genuine traction. Vijayakumar stated clearly that the company’s top goal for FY27 is to position itself to take advantage of AI opportunities over several decades. There is no doubt about the ambition. Less is known about whether the core services business will be able to maintain its position during the AI transition and whether clients’ reluctance to make discretionary purchases is a one-time event or something that will continue throughout the year.
There was much more collateral damage than just HCLTech’s own ticker. The BSE IT index experienced a 3.04 percent decline. Infosys saw a 3.78 percent decline. Tech Mahindra’s loss was 4.18%. TCS saw a 1.83 percent decrease. Wipro saw a slight decline. The industry as a whole is reexamined when the third-largest IT company by market capitalization reports disappointing results and makes cautious recommendations. It’s difficult to ignore the fact that the Nifty IT index lost more than ₹70,000 crore in total market capitalization in a single session—collateral from a single company’s earnings call spreading over an entire industry in a matter of hours.
HCLTech dropped below ITC, NTPC, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Adani Ports, and ONGC in the rankings due to the market cap decline. The difference between today’s ₹1,281 low and the company’s previous high of ₹1,780 less than a year ago is more than just a change in price; it’s a reevaluation of expectations regarding how quickly this business can expand in a market where customers are being frugal with their spending and AI hasn’t yet fully made up for what discretionary pullbacks are taking away. The test will be in FY27. There is plenty of space for either a recovery story or a confirmation of concern within the guidance range of 1 to 4 percent. Right now, the stock is priced for the latter.
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