By Sai Ishwarbharath B and Haripriya Suresh
BENGALURU, Feb 17 (Reuters) – Infosys unveiled a partnership with Anthropic on Tuesday, days after investor concerns that AI tools would disrupt the โtraditional business models of Indian IT services firms shaved billions off their market value.
The โselloff was triggered, in part, by the launch of a tool by Amazon and Alphabet-backed Anthropic, which has seen its โrevenue run-rate in India doubling in four months.
Anthropic has leaned heavily into the enterprise AI market and last month launched Claude Cowork, an AI agent that helps execute computer tasks for white-collar workers. The startup has existing partnerships with Indian companies such as Air India.
Under the tie-up, Infosys and Anthropic โwill develop and deploy AI agents, โ initially focusing on telecom, and then expanding into financial services, manufacturing, and software development, the firms said in a statement.
“There’s a big gap between an AI โ model that works in a demo and one that works in a regulated industry, and if you want to close that gap, you need domain expertise,” Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said on the Infosys โtie-up.
Infosys shares โrose as much as 4.8%, snapping a fourโsession losing โstreak, and closed 1.9% higher, making โit among the top gainers on the blueโchip Nifty 50, which ended 0.17% higher.
The Indian firm said on Tuesday that AI services accounted for 5.5% of its total revenue in the December quarter. Larger rival Tata Consultancy Services has said AI services generate roughly 5.8% of its annual revenue.
The contribution from AI services “is growing at a robust pace,” Infosys CEO Salil Parekh said. The CEO had โearlier said that Infosys was working on 4,600 AI projects โand had developed more than 500 agents.
Last week, Indian โIT stocks had their worst showing in โmore than 10 months. In all, IT firms have lost $44.46 billion in market โcapitalization so far in February.
“Infosys has better โexposure to discretionary spends โand TCS has a lot more legacy clients and systems, and works with a larger number of public sector clients who may take time to decide and allocate funds for โAI services,” Centrum Broking analyst โPiyush Pandey said, signalling that Infosys is better placed than TCS to leverage the โtechnology.
($1 = 90.7510 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Haripriya Suresh and Sai Ishwarbharath B in Bengaluru; Editing โby Mrigank Dhaniwala, Dhanya Skariachan and Rashmi Aich)