Debasis Mohapatra
Bengaluru, 21 March 2026
Global IT services giant, Accenture’s Q2FY26 results prompted a short-lived relief rally in Indian IT stocks on last week. When the world is embroiled with the West Asian war and serious disruption to business models of IT services companies are being anticipated owing to the AI (artificial intelligence) wave, Accenture results came as a breath of fresh air.
Let’s dive deep into the numbers and management commentary of Accenture and understand its significance for Indian IT services companies, which are operating in the same space.
- Revenue outlook for FY26 raised by Accenture:
Despite all the talks of AI eating into software, Accenture has increased its revenue outlook for fiscal 2026. The company, which follows September-August financial year cycle, now expects its revenue to grow in the range of 3-5% from earlier 2-5%. The company said that the revenue outlook has factored in the ongoing Middle East crisis.
“Currently we are not seeing any significant financial impact…… Our range for Q3 and the full year reflect our best view today of the potential impact of the conflict in H2. It does not take into account a significant escalation or the occurrence of major economic disruption,” Angie Park, Chief Financial Officer at Accenture said during the conference call with analysts.
India Angle: The increased revenue outlook shows that demand environment remains stable, which is good news for the Indian IT companies.
2) Healthy deal pipeline & Consulting Revenue increases:
Accenture posted healthy growth in its deal pipeline, indicating enterprises continue to invest in large digital transformation projects.
| Particular | Q2 Fiscal 2026 | YoY Growth USD |
| New Bookings | $22.1 billion | 6% ↑ |
| Consulting Bookings | $11.3 billion | Book-to-Bill ratio of 1.3 |
| Managed Services Bookings | $10.8 billion | Book-to-Bill ratio of 1.2 |
Importantly, the company said that a record 41 clients gave more than $100 million worth contracts each, taking its total such bookings to 74 in the H1 of fiscal 2026.
“We had a record 41 clients with quarterly bookings greater than $100 million, bringing us to 74 of these bookings in the first half, 12 more than this time last year, demonstrating the continued demand for reinvention at scale,” Julie Sweet, CEO of Accenture said during the analyst call.
India Angle: Accenture’s consulting bookings grew handsomely. Such growth optimism seen in Accenture may not translate for many Indian IT companies as consulting practice of many companies is not big. However, book-to-bill ratio of Accenture raises hopes for top IT companies, which have seen slow translation of deals into actual revenue.
However, some brokerage firms have pointed out that the managed services business have shown deceleration at Accenture. This may not bring good news for Indian IT companies, which draw most of their revenues from managed services space.
“Accenture’s managed services business — which historically has a strong correlation with Indian IT revenues — is showing signs of deceleration compared to last year,” Morgan Stanley said in a report on key takeaways from Accenture’s results for Indian IT companies.
3) Financial services, & Tech continue to grow:
Financial Services, & Communications, Media & Technology verticals posted healthy growth during the second quarter of Accenture.
| Particulars | Revenue in Q2 Fiscal 2026 | YoY Growth USD |
| Financial Services | $3.40 billion | 13% ↑ |
| Communications, Media & Technology | $3.09 billion | 13% ↑ |
| Health & Public Service | $3.67 billion | 2% ↑ |
India Angle:
According to industry analysts, the growth in Financial Services vertical augurs well for Indian IT services providers.
“Financial services & tech verticals remained steady and have not seen any deterioration. This trend will also be reflected for Indian IT services companies. Also, there seems to be no impact so far due to ongoing West Asia conflict,” Pareekh Jain, an IT outsourcing advisor & Founder of Pareekh Consulting told the Data Biz Times.
4) AI starts to push up revenue growth:
The management commentary on artificial intelligence (AI) driving revenue growth sounded encouraging. According to CEO of Accenture, Julie Sweet, AI is a tailwind, supplementing the revenue growth rate.
“..Clients with more advanced digital cores are starting to take on larger AI programmes. We also are seeing more moving from proofs of concept to production, while others are still at the beginning of their journey, with another 100 clients or so initiating Advanced AI projects with us this quarter,” Sweet said on the analyst call.
“We see AI as a tailwind because it is helping us win more today and take market share and it is creating new opportunities for growth over time,” she added.
The company also said that it has over 85,000 AI and data professionals. “Thanks to our intentional talent strategy, we will hire more entry level reinventors in FY26 than FY25, which is important for our financial model,” Sweet also said.
India Angle: Nifty IT Index had lost more than 22% so far this year as investors feared AI fundamentally disrupting the business model of Indian IT firms. No wonder, frontline IT stocks had been down around 30% Year-to-Date (YTD). However, if the results of Accenture something to go by, then Indian IT services providers are likely to see more AI deals in the coming quarters. It has to be seen whether such trend becomes a reality for Indian IT companies.
5) What happens to the impact of Anthropic, Open AI & other AI firms’ agentic AI plugins on IT services firms?
Most of the market correction in the IT services companies and SaaS firms has happened after Ai giants like Anthropic, OpenAI and others released agentic AI plugins. Many analysts claimed that these agentic AI tools would make several IT processes automated, hence putting the core operations of IT services companies at risk. However, Accenture management indicated that nothing of that sort is happening in the market place.
According to CEO of Accenture, new models (LLMs) are creating new business opportunities for IT companies.
“…Models are basically just a super powerful engine. So, if you think about the car, right, you’ve got this great engine, only if it’s connected to everything, if it has wheels, so you can actually make it run and the transmission to guard it. And so, when the models come out, there isn’t a direct correlation to bookings or new work. But what it does is create the next opportunity for us to look at what are the solutions that it’s going to now create,” Sweet said in the analyst call.
India Angle: This is what tech leaders in India are also saying. AI agent integration and implementation require domain knowledge about the industry and client, which IT companies have due to their multi-decadal engagement. Accenture’s commentary on AI tools should be seen as a positive for Indian technology companies.
Overall, Accenture’s results infuse better prospects for IT services industry going ahead though several moving parts will determine the exact trajectory.