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BREAKINGVIEWS-Low fees take shine off India's IPO bonanza
The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are her own.
By Shritama Bose
MUMBAI, Feb 10 (Reuters Breakingviews) - A record run of listings is doing little to shore up investment banking fortunes in India. Citi and JPMorgan passed up working on a $1.4 billion float last month by SBI Funds Management, India's largest asset manager, after the issuer set fees at 0.01% of the issue size, Bloomberg reported citing sources. Such state-backed issuers are usually stingy but the hottest private issuers in 2026 are likely to offer slim pickings too.
Fees are growing but remain well short of desirable levels. Net revenue from India's $23 billion of initial public offerings amounted to 1.7% of proceeds in 2025, up from 1.4% a year earlier, Dealogic data show. Underwriters in the U.S. typically command between 4% and 7%.
And while India is now delivering a consistent pipeline of sizeable deals, extracting the measly fees on offer is painful. ICICI Prudential Asset Management's IICL.NS $1.4 billion offering in December was shepherded by 18 banks.
Fees also are increasingly split into equal fixed and variable components tied to the quality of investors a bank brings to a transaction. Roughly one-fifth of the total payout is reserved as a discretionary bonus issuers can choose to hold back. In practice, robust demand for Indian stock means these incentives and bonuses are mostly paid but they suck up time to negotiate.
Firms working on prospective blockbuster deals - such as Reliance Industries' RELI.NS planned offering of Jio Platforms, handled by Morgan Stanley and Kotak Mahindra Bank, per a Reuters report, and National Stock Exchange - won't be spoilt for riches either.
Choosing deals well can be rewarding. Foreigners remain among the few willing to pay for advice. IT exporter Hexaware Technologies HEXW.NS, acquired by global private equity firm Carlyle CG.O in 2021, paid 2.5% to Kotak and Citi for its $1 billion listing, for example. Mandates on the Indian listings of multinationals' local subsidiaries, such as Hyundai Motor India HYUN.NS and LG Electronics India LGEL.NS, have been lucrative too.
Those fees, though, are unlikely to push much higher if the rest of the market is stingy.
Follow Shritama Bose on LinkedIn and X.
CONTEXT NEWS
Citi and JPMorgan pulled out of a planned $1.4 billion initial public offering by SBI Funds Management over low fees, Bloomberg reported on January 7, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter. SBI Funds later replaced Citi with Jefferies, the report added. Sellers State Bank of India and France’s Amundi offered fees of about 0.01% of the issue size after some domestic advisers quoted only a token fee for the mandate, the report said.
India IPO fee growth is uneven https://www.reuters.com/graphics/BRV-BRV/movabedbjpa/chart.png
(Additional reporting by Aditya Srivastav; Editing by Una Galani; Production by Aditya Srivastav)
((For previous columns by the author, Reuters customers can click on BOSE/[email protected]))
The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are her own.
By Shritama Bose
MUMBAI, Feb 10 (Reuters Breakingviews) - A record run of listings is doing little to shore up investment banking fortunes in India. Citi and JPMorgan passed up working on a $1.4 billion float last month by SBI Funds Management, India's largest asset manager, after the issuer set fees at 0.01% of the issue size, Bloomberg reported citing sources. Such state-backed issuers are usually stingy but the hottest private issuers in 2026 are likely to offer slim pickings too.
Fees are growing but remain well short of desirable levels. Net revenue from India's $23 billion of initial public offerings amounted to 1.7% of proceeds in 2025, up from 1.4% a year earlier, Dealogic data show. Underwriters in the U.S. typically command between 4% and 7%.
And while India is now delivering a consistent pipeline of sizeable deals, extracting the measly fees on offer is painful. ICICI Prudential Asset Management's IICL.NS $1.4 billion offering in December was shepherded by 18 banks.
Fees also are increasingly split into equal fixed and variable components tied to the quality of investors a bank brings to a transaction. Roughly one-fifth of the total payout is reserved as a discretionary bonus issuers can choose to hold back. In practice, robust demand for Indian stock means these incentives and bonuses are mostly paid but they suck up time to negotiate.
Firms working on prospective blockbuster deals - such as Reliance Industries' RELI.NS planned offering of Jio Platforms, handled by Morgan Stanley and Kotak Mahindra Bank, per a Reuters report, and National Stock Exchange - won't be spoilt for riches either.
Choosing deals well can be rewarding. Foreigners remain among the few willing to pay for advice. IT exporter Hexaware Technologies HEXW.NS, acquired by global private equity firm Carlyle CG.O in 2021, paid 2.5% to Kotak and Citi for its $1 billion listing, for example. Mandates on the Indian listings of multinationals' local subsidiaries, such as Hyundai Motor India HYUN.NS and LG Electronics India LGEL.NS, have been lucrative too.
Those fees, though, are unlikely to push much higher if the rest of the market is stingy.
Follow Shritama Bose on LinkedIn and X.
CONTEXT NEWS
Citi and JPMorgan pulled out of a planned $1.4 billion initial public offering by SBI Funds Management over low fees, Bloomberg reported on January 7, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter. SBI Funds later replaced Citi with Jefferies, the report added. Sellers State Bank of India and France’s Amundi offered fees of about 0.01% of the issue size after some domestic advisers quoted only a token fee for the mandate, the report said.
India IPO fee growth is uneven https://www.reuters.com/graphics/BRV-BRV/movabedbjpa/chart.png
(Additional reporting by Aditya Srivastav; Editing by Una Galani; Production by Aditya Srivastav)
((For previous columns by the author, Reuters customers can click on BOSE/[email protected]))
Hexaware Technologies Dec-Quarter Consol Net Profit 2.92 Billion Rupees
Feb 4 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
HEXAWARE TECHNOLOGIES DEC-QUARTER CONSOL NET PROFIT 2.92 BILLION RUPEES
HEXAWARE TECHNOLOGIES DEC-QUARTER CONSOL REVENUE FROM OPERATIONS 34.78 BILLION RUPEES
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];))
Feb 4 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
HEXAWARE TECHNOLOGIES DEC-QUARTER CONSOL NET PROFIT 2.92 BILLION RUPEES
HEXAWARE TECHNOLOGIES DEC-QUARTER CONSOL REVENUE FROM OPERATIONS 34.78 BILLION RUPEES
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];))
BREAKINGVIEWS-Asian investment banking is at an inflection point
The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are her own. Refiles to fix typo in advisory.
By Una Galani
HONG KONG, Feb 3 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Investment banking is a daunting business in Asia Pacific. The regional bosses of some Wall Street giants liken their job to corralling a loose confederation of mercenaries, or battling a three-headed monster. Such are the challenges of running a sprawling geography full of first-time fee payers, with mixed levels of financial sophistication among clients. As activity rebounds, though, the region seems to be at a positive inflection point, with many of its major markets firing up at once.
Globally, the art of dealmaking is back. The world's top executives are eyeing big acquisitions as borrowing costs fall and the shock of U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war recedes. In Asia Pacific, total investment banking revenue across deal advice, equity and debt underwriting hit almost $17 billion in 2025, according to Dealogic. That was below 2021's $22 billion level but better than in the intervening years. Volumes so far in 2026 look set to outpace the peak four years ago.
The investment banking business in Asia has changed since the slump. While China and Australia once dominated the action for Western firms, tensions between Washington and Beijing killed off the most lucrative businesses: Chinese outbound acquisitions and U.S. listings by firms from the People's Republic. That was a space Goldman Sachs GS.N and Morgan Stanley MS.N dominated, thanks to their powerful technology-industry franchises among other things.
Today, the fees up for grabs are more broad-based. Chinese firms have a pent-up demand for capital, especially in the booming innovation economy spanning artificial intelligence, biotechnology and robotics. Down Under, miners are riding another mergers and acquisition boom: JPMorgan JPM.N is among the advisers to Rio Tinto RIO.L on its hoped-for Glencore GLEN.L deal, which would create by far the world's largest mining company worth more than $200 billion.
There's also a steady stream of sizable deals coming from historically quieter countries. Take India, where the debut of Jio in Mumbai will likely take the crown for the region's largest 2026 initial public offering. Bankers are hoping to win Mukesh Ambani's telecom giant a valuation as high as $170 billion. In Japan, meanwhile, corporate governance reforms have stirred up a domestic M&A boom, making the country a top destination for buyout barons, led by Bain Capital and KKR KKR.N.
Helped by these two markets, Citigroup C.N closed 2025 with its best revenues in Asian investment banking for over a decade. The U.S. firm, which is turning itself around under CEO Jane Fraser, advised on Nippon Steel's 5401.T acquisition of U.S. Steel, and won mandates when South Korean firms Hyundai 005380.KS and LG 003550.KS listed their Indian businesses in Mumbai. Morgan Stanley for the second year running generated the most fees in the region, encompassing M&A, equity and debt underwriting. Among Western banks, JPMorgan followed.
The locals are growing ever more powerful, however, with Chinese banks like CITIC Securities 600030.SS rising up the rankings because of their dominance in certain onshore businesses that global firms don't compete for. It means the real addressable market for Wall Street firms in Asia is probably around half the overall regional pie.
In equity underwriting, fee rates are compressing, instead of trending higher towards U.S. levels. As a percentage of total proceeds, revenue plunged from nearly 3% in 2000 to barely 1.5% in 2024, LSEG data shows. Bankers say fees on convertibles and block trades remain resilient. But Hong Kong IPO activity is also now dominated by secondary listings by firms whose shares already trade on mainland bourses. That's less demanding work, and so it pays less. Morgan Stanley Asia Pacific CEO Gokul Laroia admits the problem, though stabilising, is "pretty systemic".
Quirky brokerage fees have helped to cushion the blow for banks. Investors buying shares in Hong Kong IPOs pay 1% to firms handling stock sales. The charge was rarely talked about in the good times. It was introduced over 30 years ago when brokers owned the bourse that is now operated by Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing. The fee is not enough to compensate for wider compression, though. CATL's Hong Kong offering paid a 0.9% fee and 1% brokerage, for example, turning a derisory sum into one that's still nothing to brag about.
Meanwhile, outbound Chinese acquisitions - including Zijin Mining's 2899.HK bid for Allied Gold - are likely to remain a trickle given political sensitivities in Europe and North America. And other cross-border deals, such as UK drugmaker AstraZeneca's AZN.L licensing of weight-loss drugs from China's CSPC 1093.HK, involve only small upfront payments, capping the reward for bankers. In India, tycoons and state companies remain stingy fee payers and insist on building incentives into remuneration for capital-market deals. These clauses, which include variable components paid out depending on which investors are brought to a deal, are time-consuming to negotiate. Banks that are picky about their clients are better off. Hexaware HEXW.NS, backed by U.S. private equity firm Carlyle, paid a 2.5% fee for its Mumbai IPO. By contrast, Reliance's mega offering will offer banks more prestige than pay.
The biggest shift is in Japan. High levels of private equity-led M&A mean the country is taking a bigger slice of regional fees. Here, Morgan Stanley is the envy of its peers. Its joint venture since 2008 with Mitsubishi UFJ Financial 8306.T, which connects the Japanese lender's clients to investment bankers worldwide, underpins the Wall Street giant's top regional position. It also gives the U.S. investment bank extra heft outside of Japan: the duo came together to provide a $4.5 billion bridge loan for Tata Motor's TAMO.NS acquisition of Italy's Iveco, for example.
Morgan Stanley's partnership was underestimated when it was formed as part of a capital call for the U.S. bank during the global financial crisis. Replicating it now looks tricky. So to compete in Japan, global firms are ramping up their headcount and expanding their coverage - especially for the middle market, where the bulk of buyouts happen. Goldman's decision last year to combine its investment banking businesses in Australia, Japan, and the rest of Asia into a single, unified regional unit underscores the shifting pressures and opportunities for the bank run by David Solomon.
Geopolitical tension between the U.S. and China is also reshaping fortunes. Washington is allowing U.S. banks a wide berth: Morgan Stanley and Goldman, for example, advised on the Hong Kong IPO of artificial intelligence startup MiniMax this year. But Chinese clients are being selective. If they opt to have any international advisers on deals, they increasingly insist on using at least one non-U.S. firm. That's a tailwind for Switzerland's UBS UBSG.S and Deutsche Bank DBKGn.DE.
Investment banking activity in Asia may be lifting off. But extracting fees won't be easy for Wall Street firms.
Follow Una Galani on Linkedin and X.
CONTEXT NEWS
Asia Pacific core investment banking fees amounted to $16.5 billion in 2025, according to Dealogic. Core investment banking comprises equity capital markets, mergers and acquisitions and debt capital markets. It excludes loans. Fees peaked at a total of $21.8 billion in 2021.
Asia investment banking revenue is recovering slowly https://www.reuters.com/graphics/BRV-BRV/znvnqrdjapl/chart.png
Asia investment banking fees for are below their 2021 peak https://www.reuters.com/graphics/BRV-BRV/zgvoygwbmvd/chart.png
Fee compression in Asia equity capital market deals is intense https://www.reuters.com/graphics/BRV-BRV/jnvwkngbmvw/chart.png
Japan is generating a growing share of Asia Pacific fees https://www.reuters.com/graphics/BRV-BRV/zdpxjzyozpx/chart.png
(Editing by Liam Proud; Production by Shrabani Chakraborty)
((For previous columns by the author, Reuters customers can click on GALANI/ [email protected]))
The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are her own. Refiles to fix typo in advisory.
By Una Galani
HONG KONG, Feb 3 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Investment banking is a daunting business in Asia Pacific. The regional bosses of some Wall Street giants liken their job to corralling a loose confederation of mercenaries, or battling a three-headed monster. Such are the challenges of running a sprawling geography full of first-time fee payers, with mixed levels of financial sophistication among clients. As activity rebounds, though, the region seems to be at a positive inflection point, with many of its major markets firing up at once.
Globally, the art of dealmaking is back. The world's top executives are eyeing big acquisitions as borrowing costs fall and the shock of U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war recedes. In Asia Pacific, total investment banking revenue across deal advice, equity and debt underwriting hit almost $17 billion in 2025, according to Dealogic. That was below 2021's $22 billion level but better than in the intervening years. Volumes so far in 2026 look set to outpace the peak four years ago.
The investment banking business in Asia has changed since the slump. While China and Australia once dominated the action for Western firms, tensions between Washington and Beijing killed off the most lucrative businesses: Chinese outbound acquisitions and U.S. listings by firms from the People's Republic. That was a space Goldman Sachs GS.N and Morgan Stanley MS.N dominated, thanks to their powerful technology-industry franchises among other things.
Today, the fees up for grabs are more broad-based. Chinese firms have a pent-up demand for capital, especially in the booming innovation economy spanning artificial intelligence, biotechnology and robotics. Down Under, miners are riding another mergers and acquisition boom: JPMorgan JPM.N is among the advisers to Rio Tinto RIO.L on its hoped-for Glencore GLEN.L deal, which would create by far the world's largest mining company worth more than $200 billion.
There's also a steady stream of sizable deals coming from historically quieter countries. Take India, where the debut of Jio in Mumbai will likely take the crown for the region's largest 2026 initial public offering. Bankers are hoping to win Mukesh Ambani's telecom giant a valuation as high as $170 billion. In Japan, meanwhile, corporate governance reforms have stirred up a domestic M&A boom, making the country a top destination for buyout barons, led by Bain Capital and KKR KKR.N.
Helped by these two markets, Citigroup C.N closed 2025 with its best revenues in Asian investment banking for over a decade. The U.S. firm, which is turning itself around under CEO Jane Fraser, advised on Nippon Steel's 5401.T acquisition of U.S. Steel, and won mandates when South Korean firms Hyundai 005380.KS and LG 003550.KS listed their Indian businesses in Mumbai. Morgan Stanley for the second year running generated the most fees in the region, encompassing M&A, equity and debt underwriting. Among Western banks, JPMorgan followed.
The locals are growing ever more powerful, however, with Chinese banks like CITIC Securities 600030.SS rising up the rankings because of their dominance in certain onshore businesses that global firms don't compete for. It means the real addressable market for Wall Street firms in Asia is probably around half the overall regional pie.
In equity underwriting, fee rates are compressing, instead of trending higher towards U.S. levels. As a percentage of total proceeds, revenue plunged from nearly 3% in 2000 to barely 1.5% in 2024, LSEG data shows. Bankers say fees on convertibles and block trades remain resilient. But Hong Kong IPO activity is also now dominated by secondary listings by firms whose shares already trade on mainland bourses. That's less demanding work, and so it pays less. Morgan Stanley Asia Pacific CEO Gokul Laroia admits the problem, though stabilising, is "pretty systemic".
Quirky brokerage fees have helped to cushion the blow for banks. Investors buying shares in Hong Kong IPOs pay 1% to firms handling stock sales. The charge was rarely talked about in the good times. It was introduced over 30 years ago when brokers owned the bourse that is now operated by Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing. The fee is not enough to compensate for wider compression, though. CATL's Hong Kong offering paid a 0.9% fee and 1% brokerage, for example, turning a derisory sum into one that's still nothing to brag about.
Meanwhile, outbound Chinese acquisitions - including Zijin Mining's 2899.HK bid for Allied Gold - are likely to remain a trickle given political sensitivities in Europe and North America. And other cross-border deals, such as UK drugmaker AstraZeneca's AZN.L licensing of weight-loss drugs from China's CSPC 1093.HK, involve only small upfront payments, capping the reward for bankers. In India, tycoons and state companies remain stingy fee payers and insist on building incentives into remuneration for capital-market deals. These clauses, which include variable components paid out depending on which investors are brought to a deal, are time-consuming to negotiate. Banks that are picky about their clients are better off. Hexaware HEXW.NS, backed by U.S. private equity firm Carlyle, paid a 2.5% fee for its Mumbai IPO. By contrast, Reliance's mega offering will offer banks more prestige than pay.
The biggest shift is in Japan. High levels of private equity-led M&A mean the country is taking a bigger slice of regional fees. Here, Morgan Stanley is the envy of its peers. Its joint venture since 2008 with Mitsubishi UFJ Financial 8306.T, which connects the Japanese lender's clients to investment bankers worldwide, underpins the Wall Street giant's top regional position. It also gives the U.S. investment bank extra heft outside of Japan: the duo came together to provide a $4.5 billion bridge loan for Tata Motor's TAMO.NS acquisition of Italy's Iveco, for example.
Morgan Stanley's partnership was underestimated when it was formed as part of a capital call for the U.S. bank during the global financial crisis. Replicating it now looks tricky. So to compete in Japan, global firms are ramping up their headcount and expanding their coverage - especially for the middle market, where the bulk of buyouts happen. Goldman's decision last year to combine its investment banking businesses in Australia, Japan, and the rest of Asia into a single, unified regional unit underscores the shifting pressures and opportunities for the bank run by David Solomon.
Geopolitical tension between the U.S. and China is also reshaping fortunes. Washington is allowing U.S. banks a wide berth: Morgan Stanley and Goldman, for example, advised on the Hong Kong IPO of artificial intelligence startup MiniMax this year. But Chinese clients are being selective. If they opt to have any international advisers on deals, they increasingly insist on using at least one non-U.S. firm. That's a tailwind for Switzerland's UBS UBSG.S and Deutsche Bank DBKGn.DE.
Investment banking activity in Asia may be lifting off. But extracting fees won't be easy for Wall Street firms.
Follow Una Galani on Linkedin and X.
CONTEXT NEWS
Asia Pacific core investment banking fees amounted to $16.5 billion in 2025, according to Dealogic. Core investment banking comprises equity capital markets, mergers and acquisitions and debt capital markets. It excludes loans. Fees peaked at a total of $21.8 billion in 2021.
Asia investment banking revenue is recovering slowly https://www.reuters.com/graphics/BRV-BRV/znvnqrdjapl/chart.png
Asia investment banking fees for are below their 2021 peak https://www.reuters.com/graphics/BRV-BRV/zgvoygwbmvd/chart.png
Fee compression in Asia equity capital market deals is intense https://www.reuters.com/graphics/BRV-BRV/jnvwkngbmvw/chart.png
Japan is generating a growing share of Asia Pacific fees https://www.reuters.com/graphics/BRV-BRV/zdpxjzyozpx/chart.png
(Editing by Liam Proud; Production by Shrabani Chakraborty)
((For previous columns by the author, Reuters customers can click on GALANI/ [email protected]))
Hexaware Technologies Gets New Jersey Approval For Merger Of Units Mobiquity Velocity Solutions And Mobiquity
Dec 31 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
GOT NEW JERSEY APPROVAL FOR MERGER OF UNITS MOBIQUITY VELOCITY SOLUTIONS AND MOBIQUITY
Source text: ID:nBSE1P3Wl
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];;))
Dec 31 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
GOT NEW JERSEY APPROVAL FOR MERGER OF UNITS MOBIQUITY VELOCITY SOLUTIONS AND MOBIQUITY
Source text: ID:nBSE1P3Wl
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];;))
Hexaware Technologies Sets Up New Delivery Centre In Cairo
Dec 4 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
SETS UP NEW DELIVERY CENTRE IN CAIRO
Source text: ID:nBSE2yY9QX
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];))
Dec 4 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
SETS UP NEW DELIVERY CENTRE IN CAIRO
Source text: ID:nBSE2yY9QX
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];))
Hexaware Technologies Launches Two New Insurance Solutions For Google Cloud
Nov 11 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
HEXAWARE TECHNOLOGIES LTD - LAUNCHES TWO NEW INSURANCE SOLUTIONS FOR GOOGLE CLOUD
Source text: ID:nBSE42Zwsb
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];))
Nov 11 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
HEXAWARE TECHNOLOGIES LTD - LAUNCHES TWO NEW INSURANCE SOLUTIONS FOR GOOGLE CLOUD
Source text: ID:nBSE42Zwsb
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];))
Hexaware Technologies Updates On US H1B Visa Regulation Changes
Sept 22 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
UPDATE ON US H1B VISA REGULATION CHANGES
U.S. VISA FEE INCREASE IMPACT EXPECTED TO BE IMMATERIAL
COMPANY MADE NO FRESH H-1B APPLICATIONS IN APRIL 2025
DO NOT ANTICIPATE FINANCIAL OR OPERATIONAL IMPACT FROM REGULATORY CHANGES
Source text: ID:nBSE3919Sc
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];;))
Sept 22 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
UPDATE ON US H1B VISA REGULATION CHANGES
U.S. VISA FEE INCREASE IMPACT EXPECTED TO BE IMMATERIAL
COMPANY MADE NO FRESH H-1B APPLICATIONS IN APRIL 2025
DO NOT ANTICIPATE FINANCIAL OR OPERATIONAL IMPACT FROM REGULATORY CHANGES
Source text: ID:nBSE3919Sc
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];;))
Hexaware Technologies Inks Partnership With Replit
Aug 28 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
INKS PARTNERSHIP WITH REPLIT
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];;))
Aug 28 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
INKS PARTNERSHIP WITH REPLIT
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];;))
Hexaware Technologies Says Hexaware, Upgrad Launch Agentic AI Academy
Aug 19 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
HEXAWARE, UPGRAD LAUNCH AGENTIC AI ACADEMY
Source text: ID:nBSE3tvZDy
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];;))
Aug 19 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
HEXAWARE, UPGRAD LAUNCH AGENTIC AI ACADEMY
Source text: ID:nBSE3tvZDy
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];;))
Hexaware Technologies Collaborates With San Francisco Unicorns
March 6 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
COLLABORATION WITH SAN FRANCISCO UNICORNS
Source text: ID:nBSEL8Gq
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];;))
March 6 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
COLLABORATION WITH SAN FRANCISCO UNICORNS
Source text: ID:nBSEL8Gq
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];;))
Hexaware Technologies Receives RBI Compounding Order For Delay In Filing Form FC TRS
March 4 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
HEXAWARE TECHNOLOGIES LTD - HEXWARE RECEIVES RBI COMPOUNDING ORDER FOR DELAY IN FILING FORM FC TRS
HEXAWARE TECHNOLOGIES - RBI LEVIES 7.3 MILLION RUPEES FOR DELAY IN FILING FORM FC TRS
Source text: ID:nBSE7lrzPq
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];))
March 4 (Reuters) - Hexaware Technologies Ltd HEXW.NS:
HEXAWARE TECHNOLOGIES LTD - HEXWARE RECEIVES RBI COMPOUNDING ORDER FOR DELAY IN FILING FORM FC TRS
HEXAWARE TECHNOLOGIES - RBI LEVIES 7.3 MILLION RUPEES FOR DELAY IN FILING FORM FC TRS
Source text: ID:nBSE7lrzPq
Further company coverage: HEXW.NS
(([email protected];))
REFILE-India's Hexaware Technologies rises 5% in market debut
Corrects media packaging code to HEXAWARE-LISTING from HEXAWARE-STOCKS; no changes to text
Feb 19 (Reuters) - Shares of Hexaware Technologies HEXW.NS rose 5% in their market debut on Wednesday, after its $1 billion initial public offering which saw institutional buyers rush in as retail investors held back.
(Reporting by Nandan Mandayam in Bengaluru; Editing by Varun H K)
(([email protected]; Mobile: +91 9591011727;))
Corrects media packaging code to HEXAWARE-LISTING from HEXAWARE-STOCKS; no changes to text
Feb 19 (Reuters) - Shares of Hexaware Technologies HEXW.NS rose 5% in their market debut on Wednesday, after its $1 billion initial public offering which saw institutional buyers rush in as retail investors held back.
(Reporting by Nandan Mandayam in Bengaluru; Editing by Varun H K)
(([email protected]; Mobile: +91 9591011727;))
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What does Hexaware Tech. do?
Hexaware Technologies is a global digital and technology services company with artificial intelligence (AI) at its core. It leverages technology to deliver innovative solutions that help customers in their digital transformation journey and subsequent operations. It embeds AI into every aspect of its solutions.
Who are the competitors of Hexaware Tech.?
Hexaware Tech. major competitors are Persistent Systems, Coforge, LTIMindtree, Mphasis. Market Cap of Hexaware Tech. is ₹34,000 Crs. While the median market cap of its peers are ₹67,889 Crs.
Is Hexaware Tech. financially stable compared to its competitors?
Hexaware Tech. seems to be financially stable compared to its competitors. The probability of it going bankrupt or facing a financial crunch seem to be lower than its immediate competitors.
Does Hexaware Tech. pay decent dividends?
The company seems to pay a good stable dividend. Hexaware Tech. latest dividend payout ratio is 45.22% and 3yr average dividend payout ratio is 57.87%
How has Hexaware Tech. allocated its funds?
Companies resources are allocated to majorly productive assets like Plant & Machinery
How strong is Hexaware Tech. balance sheet?
Balance sheet of Hexaware Tech. is strong. It shouldn't have solvency or liquidity issues.
Is the profitablity of Hexaware Tech. improving?
Yes, profit is increasing. The profit of Hexaware Tech. is ₹1,368 Crs for TTM, ₹1,176 Crs for Dec 2024 and ₹998 Crs for Dec 2023.
Is the debt of Hexaware Tech. increasing or decreasing?
Yes, The net debt of Hexaware Tech. is increasing. Latest net debt of Hexaware Tech. is -₹1,982.5 Crs as of Dec-25. This is greater than Dec-24 when it was -₹3,948.4 Crs.
Is Hexaware Tech. stock expensive?
Hexaware Tech. is not expensive. Latest PE of Hexaware Tech. is 24.27, while 3 year average PE is 37.51. Also latest EV/EBITDA of Hexaware Tech. is 14.64 while 3yr average is 25.7.
Has the share price of Hexaware Tech. grown faster than its competition?
Hexaware Tech. has given lower returns compared to its competitors. Hexaware Tech. has grown at ~11.22% over the last 9yrs while peers have grown at a median rate of 30.0%
Is the promoter bullish about Hexaware Tech.?
Promoters seem not to be bullish about the company and have been selling shares in the open market. Latest quarter promoter holding in Hexaware Tech. is 74.3% and last quarter promoter holding is 74.55%
Are mutual funds buying/selling Hexaware Tech.?
The mutual fund holding of Hexaware Tech. is increasing. The current mutual fund holding in Hexaware Tech. is 10.81% while previous quarter holding is 10.44%.
