Strategy
Indian Mid-Cap IT Firms Reshape Competitive Dynamics Through Aggressive M&A
India's mid-cap IT services firms are leveraging acquisitions to drive faster incremental revenue growth than their larger peers, signaling a structural shift in the industry's competitive landscape as AI and weak demand alter growth trajectories.
A New Growth Paradigm: Mid-Caps Outpacing the Titans
For the first time since the turn of the century, India's mid-cap IT services firms are on track to add more incremental revenue than their larger peers in the current fiscal year. The catalyst is not organic demand recovery but a deliberate, acquisition-driven strategy that reflects a fundamental reordering of competitive priorities in the sector.According to analysts, three of India's seven leading mid-cap IT firms—Coforge, Mphasis, and Hexaware Technologies—completed acquisitions in the first quarter of FY27 and are projected to add $647 million in new business, roughly three-fifths of their total incremental revenue from the previous year. In contrast, the country's five largest IT services firms—Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, HCL Technologies, Wipro, and Tech Mahindra—collectively added $1.6 billion in incremental revenue in FY26. With Wipro and Infosys expected to contribute only $136 million and $319 million, respectively, through their recent acquisitions, the gap is narrowing fast.
The Acquisition Engine: Coforge and Persistent Lead the ChargeThe most striking example is Coforge. In April 2026, the Noida-based company acquired California-based data analytics firm Encora for $2.39 billion, a deal expected to add approximately $630 million in revenue this fiscal alone. This acquisition propelled Coforge's annualized revenue toward $2.5 billion, cementing its position as India's seventh-largest IT services firm.
Meanwhile, Persistent Systems announced its intent to acquire Munich-based digital engineering firm Nagarro for $1.3 billion. If completed, the combined entity—Persistent-Nagarro Group—would generate $2.9 billion in annual revenue, vaulting Persistent above Coforge and Mphasis to become the sixth-largest Indian IT firm. This marks the second major reshuffling of the top-tier hierarchy driven by M&A, following the LTI Infotech-Mindtree merger that created LTIMindtree in 2022.Smaller but strategic deals have also boosted Mphasis and Hexaware, with Vancouver-based Theory & Practice Business Intelligence Inc. and UK-based Consulting Professionals Services Holdings adding niche capabilities in data analytics and consulting.
Why Mid-Caps Are Moving Faster
The divergence in growth strategies stems from fundamental differences in capital allocation priorities. India's large-cap IT firms—despite spending over $5 billion on acquisitions in the past 18 months—remain constrained by fixed payout commitments. They return nearly 80% of cash to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. In FY26, the top five returned about ₹1.1 lakh crore ($13.2 billion) to shareholders, dwarfing the ₹5,500 crore ($660 million) returned by the seven mid-caps.“Mid-caps are expected to add more incremental, primarily AI-led revenue than their larger peers mainly because they can deploy all of their cash generated towards large acquisitions,” observes Sushovon Nayak, lead IT analyst at Anand Rathi Institutional Equities. This flexibility allows mid-caps to act swiftly and decisively in pursuing scale, especially as AI threatens to commoditize traditional service lines.
Competitive Pressures: AI, Demand Slowdown, and Global RivalsThe urgency for scale is magnified by two forces: the rapid commoditization of legacy IT services due to generative AI, and intensifying competition from global giants like Accenture. Accenture is aggressively targeting mid-market clients with annual revenues of $300 million to $3 billion—the traditional sweet spot for Indian mid-cap firms. Moreover, a double whammy of AI-related uncertainty and geopolitical tensions in West Asia has dampened investor sentiment, leading analysts to expect slower growth for the top five this fiscal.
Mid-cap firms have already outperformed organically: in FY26, while TCS and Wipro posted revenue declines of 0.5% and 0.3%, respectively, mid-caps like Coforge grew 29%, Persistent 17%, Hexaware 8%, and Mphasis 7%. The acquisition-led acceleration may widen the gap further.
Strategic Implications for the IndustryThis shift signals a structural transformation in Indian IT. Historically, the large caps have enjoyed dominant revenue share and client relationships. However, the mid-caps' aggressive M&A suggests that scale can be achieved through inorganic means while maintaining agility. The market is rewarding this strategy: analyst consensus expects mid-caps to continue outgrowing their larger peers over the next two to three years.
Yet, challenges remain. Integration risks, cultural clashes, and the need to retain key talent are perennial M&A hurdles. Moreover, as HFS Research CEO Phil Fersht notes, “2026 could well be the year when some mid-sized IT services firms add more visible incremental revenue than the large caps, but we need to be clear that this is being driven more by inorganic scale creation than by a broad-based demand recovery.”The Indian IT services industry is witnessing a realignment of competitive dynamics, with mid-cap firms leveraging capital flexibility and strategic acquisitions to challenge the dominance of the top five. As AI reshapes demand and global competitors encroach, the ability to rapidly scale through M&A may become the single most important differentiator. For investors and executives, the message is clear: in a fragmented landscape, bold moves define the next generation of leaders.
*This article is based on publicly available data and expert commentary from the referenced Mint article.*
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