Why India's IT Sector Faces a Growth Crisis: Expert Daljeet Kohli Explains
India’s information technology sector, which has served as a primary wealth engine for the country for three decades, is currently navigating a period of profound uncertainty. Driven by global economic headwinds and the looming shadow of AI disruption, investors are questioning whether the industry's golden era of consistent growth has come to an end.
The Missing Growth Engine in Indian IT
Independent market expert Daljeet Kohli has taken a decisive stand on the sector, maintaining a bearish outlook and opting for zero exposure to IT stocks. His primary concern is not the survival of these companies, but the disappearance of the one element that makes them attractive to equity investors: consistent growth.
Kohli notes that while Indian IT majors are unlikely to disappear, the structural drivers that fueled their rapid expansion are faltering. He observes that the market’s hypersensitivity to weak data—such as the recent cautious commentary from global giant Accenture—is a clear sign of deep-seated distrust. For growth-oriented investors, the current lack of a clear upward trajectory makes the sector a difficult place to deploy capital.
The AI Disruption and the Uncertainty of Winners
The industry is also grappling with the transformative impact of Artificial Intelligence. While AI presents a new frontier for services, it also threatens traditional business models. Kohli suggests that while certain niche players or those who successfully pivot to AI-led services may thrive, identifying the winners in this transition is currently an impossible task.
"Who will survive — the jury is still out," Kohli remarked, highlighting that when a sector loses its momentum in the eyes of the market, it takes a significant amount of time to stabilize. Because equity markets are forward-looking, the current structural challenges suggest a long period of stagnation before a new growth narrative can be established.
Reliance Jio's IPO: A Strategic Move for Value Unlocking
In a shift from the IT sector, the market is closely watching Reliance Jio's Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP). The company is planning a fresh issue of 27 crore shares, a move that Kohli interprets not as a desperate need for cash, but as a strategic "value unlocking" exercise.
Telecom is inherently capital-intensive, requiring constant investment in AI integration, app ecosystems, and technological upgrades to compete with Bharti Airtel. However, the IPO serves a more significant purpose: it allows investors to bet directly on India's telecom and digital story. By separating Jio from Reliance Industries' traditional oil refining and retail segments, the IPO provides a clean vehicle for investors to capture high-growth digital narratives without the valuation drag of the conglomerate's legacy businesses.
Key Takeaways
- Growth Stagnation: The primary risk for Indian IT is not insolvency, but a structural lack of the high-growth trajectory that has historically driven stock valuations.
- AI Uncertainty: While AI offers new service opportunities, the market remains uncertain about which specific IT players will successfully pivot and survive the disruption.
- Jio's Strategic Shift: The Reliance Jio IPO is viewed as a mechanism to decouple high-growth digital assets from Reliance's traditional business segments, offering investors a pure-play telecom opportunity.