WIPRO
CHAIRMAN AZIM PREMJI RINGS NYSE BELL
(February 10, 2006)
New
York: The applause from brokers on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
trading floor drowned out the sound of the closing bell, which Wipro
chairman Azim Premji rang Wednesday to celebrate Wipros fifth
anniversary of being listed on the NYSE. The Indian flag flew at
the entrance of the New York Stock Exchange as Premji came out of
an analyst meeting and then talked to reporters about the future
of Indian outsourcing.
He
also outlined Wipros plans to make acquisitions to build new
skills and enter new markets, while hiring at a breakneck pace to
keep up with growth. We are driving productivity at about
10% a year so if we grow 30% a year we have to increase net head
count by about 20% a year, said Premji as Wipro announced
it would hire 8,000 people at a consumer electronics facility in
Kochi by 2008.
Premji
tried to counter fears that Indian firms were under pressure to
increase volume growth to offset the effects of a 12 percent average
rise in Indian salaries from November last year. Salaries
are going up but salaries are going up everywhere in the world.
If you look at our base costs, it is about $7,500 per person, per
year. An engineer in the US costs $60,000 so even if costs in the
US go up by 3% and costs go up by 12% in India it will take 25 years
for the two costs to converge, said Premji. So our challenge
is not our price offering as far as the developed world is concerned.
Our challenge is we have to be one step ahead of emerging low-cost
competition like China, Vietnam, East Europe, Latin America and
the Philippines. Premji, however, said it would be premature
to write off India just because Chinese engineers were cheaper.
India is a huge source of talent.
There
will be 380,000 engineers graduating in India this year. You dont
have to sell India - it has established its credibility. India has
about 65% of the global outsourcing business and I think we can
retain market share. Wipro is eyeing big global deals in 2006
including a bigger slice of the action when General Motors hands
out the remaining $15 billion in five-year contracts later this
year. As a strategic move, Wipro has opened offices in Shanghai
and Beijing to take advantage of low-cost Chinese skills and is
looking for acquisitions to enter new markets. We dont
want purely linear growth. We did two acquisitions in the last two
months. We bought New Logic which has a footprint in Austria, Germany
and France and we bought an American firm mPower, said Premji,
Indias wealthiest man with his 83% stake in the $15 billion
company. With Bloomberg.
We
are looking at increasing our footprint in Europe through acquisitions
and opening centers in Bucharest and Romania. Wipro currently
operates in 35 countries, offering software development, BPO services,
management consulting as well as product engineering.
The
CFO of wipro Mr. Suresh Senapaty said that Wipro Ltd is very
actively looking at selling more American depositary receipts
in the US and the response from the investors increased and the
investors are demanding for more and more ADRS. Though there is
no specific decision taken on it, its on our radar.
Wipro, which has traded on the New York Stock Exchange for the past
five years, may sell more shares to fund acquisitions, Senapaty
said. The company has said it plans to expand overseas through acquisitions
and gain skills for new businesses. As and when we have a
large enough (acquisition) target, well be able to do it,
Senapaty said.
Meanwhile,
American investors are obviously thrilled with Indian outsourcer
Wipros better-than expected 24% jump in quarterly profit.
Release
Source: www.c2b2bnews.com
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