{"url_path":"/sec/wit/10-k/2026/item-3","section_key":"item-3","section_title":"Item 3 Key Information","topic":"sec","document":{"doc_type":"20-F","doc_date":"2026-06-02","source_url":"https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1123799/0001193125-26-253514-index.html","accession_number":"0001193125-26-253514","cik":"0001123799","ticker":"WIT","issuer_name":"WIPRO LTD","edgar_url":"https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1123799/0001193125-26-253514-index.html","primary_entity_key":"0001123799","primary_entity_name":"WIPRO LTD"},"word_count":22900,"has_tables":true,"body_markdown":"Item 3. Key Information\n\nCapitalization and Indebtedness\n\nNot applicable.\n\nReasons for the Offer and Use of Proceeds\n\nNot applicable.\n\nRisk Factors\n\nThis Annual Report on Form 20-F contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, which statements involve substantial risks and uncertainties. Our actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in these forward-looking statements as a result of certain factors, including those set forth in the following risk factors and elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 20-F. Any of these risks or other risks currently unknown or considered immaterial may adversely affect our business, as well as our reputation, financial condition and results of operations. Such risks could also adversely impact the market price of our equity shares and/or American Depositary Shares (“ADSs”), and investors may lose all or part of their investment. The following risk factors should be considered carefully in evaluating us and our business.\n\nSummary of material risks:\n\nThe following summary provides an overview of the material risks we are exposed to in the normal course of our business activities. The summary does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the full risk factors discussion immediately following this summary. We encourage you to read the full risk factors carefully.\n\n•\nOur revenues and expenses are difficult to predict because they can fluctuate significantly given the nature of the markets in which we operate.\n\n•\nOur revenue and operating results may be affected by the rate of growth in the use of technology in business and the type and level of technology spending by our clients.\n\n•\nThe markets in which we operate are highly competitive, and we might not be able to compete effectively.\n\n•\nOur revenues are highly dependent on clients primarily located in the Americas (including the United States (“U.S.”)) and Europe, as well as on clients concentrated in certain industries; therefore, an economic slowdown or factors that affect the economic health of the United States, Europe or these industries would adversely affect our business.\n\n•\nIf our clients are unable to pay our dues and receivables, our results of operations and cash flows could be adversely affected.\n\n•\nRestrictive changes to immigration laws and/or policies may hamper our growth and cause our revenue to decline.\n\n•\nRecent and continued geopolitical changes, including changes in tariffs and trade policies, where we or our clients operate, and other geopolitical events, conflicts or disruption around the globe, may directly or indirectly hamper our growth.\n\n•\nWe may be subject to litigation and be required to pay damages for deficient services or for violating intellectual property (“IP”) rights, data breach or breach of confidentiality.\n\n•\nSome of our long-term client contracts contain benchmarking and most favored customer provisions which, if triggered, could result in lower contractual revenues and profitability in the future.\n\n•\nOur work with government clients exposes us to additional risks inherent in the government contracting environment.\n\n•\nMany of our client contracts can be terminated without cause, with little or no notice and without termination charges, which could negatively impact our revenue and profitability.\n\n-4-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\n•\nOur use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) technologies may not be successful and may present business, financial, legal, and reputational risks.\n\n•\nCyberattacks and other security incidents, both real and perceived, impacting the confidentiality and integrity of our information technology and digital infrastructure could lead to loss of reputation and financial obligations.\n\n•\nAdverse changes to our relationships with key alliance partners could adversely affect our revenues and results of operations.\n\n•\nOur business will suffer if we fail to anticipate and develop new services and enhance existing services in order to keep pace with rapid changes in technology and the industries on which we focus.\n\n•\nWe are making substantial investments in new facilities and physical infrastructures, and our profitability could be reduced if our business does not grow proportionately.\n\n•\nWe may invest in companies for strategic reasons that may not be successful or meet our expectations.\n\n•\nWe may engage in future acquisitions that may not be successful or meet our expectations.\n\n•\nIf our pricing structures do not accurately anticipate the cost, complexity and duration of our work, then our contracts could be unprofitable.\n\n•\nOur profitability could suffer if we are unable to continue to successfully manage our costs.\n\n•\nWage increases in India or our inability to hire in low-cost locations may diminish our competitive advantage against companies located in the United States and Europe and may reduce our profit margins.\n\n•\nOur success depends in large part upon the strength of our management team and other highly skilled professionals. If we fail to attract, retain and manage transition of these personnel, our business may be unable to grow and our revenue could decline.\n\nRisks Related to Our Company and Our Industry\n\nOur revenues and expenses are difficult to predict because they can fluctuate significantly given the nature of the markets in which we operate. This increases the likelihood that our results could fall below our projections, ambition and expectations of investors and market analysts, which could cause the market price of our equity shares and ADSs to decline.\n\nOur results historically have fluctuated, may fluctuate in the future and may fail to match our past performance, our projections or ambition or guidance, our internal expectations or the expectations of investors due to a number of factors, including but not limited to:\n\n•\nthe size, complexity, timing, pricing terms and profitability of significant projects, as well as changes in the corporate decision-making process of our clients;\n\n•\nincreased pricing pressure from our competitors;\n\n•\nreduction in market share due to competition with large global consulting firms, software and solution providers, niche service providers, in-house information technology (“IT”) departments and global capability centers (“GCCs”) of large corporations;\n\n•\nour ability to increase sales of our services to new customers and expand sales to our existing customers;\n\n•\nindustry consolidation leading to stronger competitors that are able to compete better;\n\n•\nseasonal changes that affect the mix of services we provide to our clients or the relative proportion of services and product revenue;\n\n•\nthe effect of increased wage pressure in India and other locations and the time we require to train and productively utilize our new employees;\n\n•\nour ability to accurately forecast our clients' demand patterns to ensure the availability of trained employees to satisfy such demand; and\n\n•\nour ability to identify and acquire new businesses.\n\n-5-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nA significant portion of our total operating expenses, particularly personnel and facilities, are fixed in advance of any particular quarter. As a result, unanticipated variations in the number and timing of our projects may cause significant variations in operating results in any particular quarter. Our pricing remains competitive and clients remain focused on cost reduction and capital conservation. While we believe that we have a flexible business model which can mitigate the negative impact of an uncertain or slow growing economy, we may not be able to sustain historical levels of profitability.\n\nThere are also other factors that are not within our control that could cause significant variations in our results in any particular quarter. These include:\n\n•\nthe duration of tax holidays or exemptions and the availability of other Indian Government incentives;\n\n•\ncurrency exchange fluctuations, specifically movement of the Indian Rupee against the U.S. Dollar, the Pound Sterling, the Euro, the Canadian Dollar and the Australian Dollar, as significant portion of our revenues are in these currencies;\n\n•\npolitical uncertainties, changes in regulations, or other economic factors, including the economic conditions in India, the United States, the United Kingdom (“U.K.”), the European Union (the “EU”), Australia, the Middle East and other geographies in which we operate and uncertain or changing economic conditions particular to a business segment or to particular customer markets within that segment; and\n\n•\nincreases in cost of operations in countries that we operate in on account of changes in minimum wage regulations.\n\nTherefore, we believe that period-to-period comparisons of our results of operations are not necessarily meaningful and should not be relied upon as indications of future performance. Thus, it is possible that in the future some of our periodic results of operations may be below the expectations of public market analysts and investors, and the market price of our equity shares and ADSs could decline.\n\nRisks Related to the Markets in which We and Our Clients Operate\n\nOur revenue and operating results may be affected by the rate of growth in the use of technology in business and the type and level of technology spending by our clients.\n\nOur business depends, in part, upon continued reliance on the use of technology in business by our clients and prospective clients as well as their customers and suppliers. We have invested, and will continue to invest, in research and development and in initiatives to expand our capabilities or offerings around new technologies. The effort and initiatives may not be successful or could yield sub-optimal results, which would negatively impact our revenues and profitability. In particular, the success of our new service offerings requires continued demand for such services and our ability to meet this demand in a cost-effective manner. In challenging economic environments, prospective clients may reduce discretionary spends or defer their spending on new technologies in order to focus on other priorities or may decide not to engage our services. Also, many companies have already invested substantial resources in their current means of conducting commerce and exchanging information, and they may be reluctant or slow to adopt new approaches that could disrupt existing personnel, processes and infrastructures. If the growth of technology usage in business, or our clients’ spending on such technology, declines, or if we cannot convince our clients or potential clients to embrace new technological solutions, our revenue and operating results could be adversely affected. Additionally, our clients’ business departments are increasingly making or influencing technology-related buying decisions. If we are unable to establish business relationships with these new buying centers, or if we are unable to articulate the value of our technology services to these business functions, our revenues may be adversely impacted.\n\nThe markets in which we operate are highly competitive, and we might not be able to compete effectively.\n\nThe markets in which we offer our services and solutions are highly competitive. We compete with large global consulting firms; software and service providers, including specialized, niche and fast‑growing companies; AI-native companies and with the internal IT departments of large enterprises, including global capability centers. Some of our competitors are able to innovate or scale more rapidly or are willing to offer more aggressive pricing, contractual terms or alternative commercial models. In addition, competitors may collaborate to create competing offerings. If we are unable to effectively differentiate our services and solutions or clearly demonstrate their value to clients, we may not be able to win new engagements in sufficient volumes, maintain pricing or achieve our targeted margins, which could materially adversely affect our business, results of operations and financial condition.\n\nOur ability to compete successfully also depends on our capacity to anticipate and respond effectively to rapid and continuing changes in technology and evolving client requirements, including in areas such as digital, cloud, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies. If we do not invest adequately, innovate at an appropriate pace, or successfully adapt our service offerings, delivery models, pricing and cost structures, we may fail to maintain a competitive advantage or execute our growth strategy. Technological developments may reduce or replace demand for certain of our existing services, and clients may delay, reduce or suspend spending while evaluating new technologies or alternative solutions. In addition, industry consolidation and the increasing ability of technology providers, including ecosystem partners and AI‑native companies, to offer more integrated or platform‑based solutions that require reduced third‑party integration services to a lesser extent or replace them entirely may further intensify competition. Any failure to compete effectively could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition.\n\n-6-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nOur revenues are highly dependent on clients primarily located in the Americas (including the United States) and Europe, as well as on clients concentrated in certain industries; therefore, an economic slowdown or factors that affect the economic health of the United States, Europe or these industries would adversely affect our business.\n\nWe derive approximately 62% of our IT Services segment revenue from the Americas (including the United States) and 27% of our IT Services segment revenue from Europe. Our business and financial performance is and will continue to be affected by economic conditions globally. We are also exposed to the economic, market and fiscal conditions in the U.K. and the EU. If the economy in the Americas or Europe is volatile or uncertain or conditions in the global financial market deteriorate, pricing for our services may become less attractive and our clients located in these geographies may reduce or postpone their technology spending significantly or cause our clients to request discounts on our products or services. International political crisis, including geopolitical conflicts between Russia and Ukraine or conflict in the Middle East or South Asia, could have significant negative macroeconomic consequences, such as a rise in inflation, a slow-down in GDP growth rates, instability in global credit markets and financial conditions and diminished expectations for the global economy, including on the businesses of our customers and partners and negatively impact their spending on IT services. Reduction in spending on IT services may lower the demand for our services and negatively affect our revenues and profitability. Extreme protectionism, the imposition of tariffs, and trade wars may also result in weaker global trade and economic activity, which could adversely affect our business.\n\nWe have historically derived, and expect to continue to derive, a significant portion of our revenues from a limited number of clients operating across diverse industries and geographic markets. In fiscal year 2026, our five largest clients accounted for 14.3% of our total revenues, and our ten largest clients accounted for approximately 23.7% of our total revenues. As a result, our business and financial performance are significantly influenced by conditions affecting these clients and the markets in which they operate. The loss of, or a material reduction in business from, one or more significant clients whether due to market‑driven factors, changes in client strategy, or conditions affecting the industries in which such clients operate could have a material adverse effect on our revenues, results of operations, cash flows, and financial condition.\n\nOur clients are concentrated in certain key industries or sectors. Any significant decrease in the growth of any one of these industries, or widespread changes in any such industry, including changes to commodity prices, may reduce or alter the demand for our services and adversely affect our revenue and profitability. For instance, fluctuations in global crude oil prices have significantly impacted the companies operating in the energy industry, impacting revenue and profitability of our Energy, Manufacturing and Resources industry sector. Furthermore, some of the industries in which our clients are concentrated, such as the financial services industry, health care industry or the energy and utilities industry, are, or may be, increasingly subject to governmental regulations, including those related to climate change, sanctions and interventions. Increased regulation, changes in existing regulation or increased governmental intervention in the industries in which our clients operate may adversely affect the growth of their respective businesses and therefore negatively impact our revenues.\n\nIf our clients are unable to pay our dues and receivables, our results of operations and cash flows could be adversely affected.\n\nOur business depends on our ability to successfully obtain payments from our clients of the amounts they owe us for work performed. We evaluate the financial condition of our clients and usually bill and collect on relatively short cycles. We maintain provisions against receivables and unbilled receivables. Actual losses on client balances could differ from those that we currently anticipate and as a result we might need to adjust our provisions. There is no guarantee that we will accurately assess the creditworthiness of our clients. Macroeconomic conditions, such as a downturn or a recession, may also significantly affect financing markets the availability of capital and the terms and conditions of any financing arrangements, including the overall cost of financing as well as the financial creditworthiness of our clients. Financial difficulties for our clients, including limited access to the credit markets, higher costs to raise debt, insolvency or bankruptcy could cause clients to delay payment, request modifications of their payment terms, or default on their payment obligations to us, all of which could increase our receivables. If our clients are unable to meet their contractual obligations, our results of operations and cash flows may be adversely affected.\n\nWe also believe that our customers continue to assess the impact of macroeconomic factors on their business and future investment plans, resulting in business uncertainty. Certain of our clients, particularly those operating in technology, software and sponsor‑backed businesses, may rely on private credit and other non‑bank financing sources to fund operations and growth initiatives. Continuing or worsening economic instability or the deterioration of the financial performance, condition or prospects of our customers could result in a cancellation of, or defaults in the payments for, such orders or otherwise adversely affect spending for IT, network infrastructure, systems and tools, and limit our ability to forecast future demand for our products, which could reduce expected revenue or result in a write-down of receivables.\n\n-7-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nOur international operations subject us to risks inherent in doing business on an international level which could harm our operating results.\n\nThe majority of our software development facilities are in India. Currently, we also have facilities in several countries around the world. As we continue to increase our presence outside India, we are subject to additional risks, including risks related to complying with a wide variety of national and local laws, localization requirements, restrictions on the import and export of certain technologies, data privacy and protection regulations, Environmental, Social and Governance (“ESG”) regulations, currency fluctuations, economic and political volatility, pending elections, changes in trade and foreign exchange policies, restrictions on repatriation of funds to India and multiple and possibly overlapping tax structures.\n\nOur current international operations and future initiatives will involve a variety of risks including (i) government trade restrictions, including those which may impose restrictions, including prohibitions, on the exportation, re-exportation, sale, shipment or other transfer of programming, technology, components and/or services to foreign persons and (ii) changes in diplomatic and trade relationships, including new or increased tariffs, trade protections measures, import or export licensing requirements, trade embargoes and other trade barriers. Emerging nationalist trends in countries may also significantly and adversely alter the trade environment. These conditions may add uncertainty to the timing and budget for technology investment decisions by our customers and may impact our ability to do business in some markets or with some public-sector customers.\n\nOur international expansion plans may not be successful, and we may not be able to compete effectively in other countries. We may face competition in other countries from companies that may have more experience with operations in such countries, have well-established relationships with clients, or be able to provide services at lower costs or on terms more attractive than we can. We may also face difficulties integrating new facilities in different countries into our existing operations, as well as integrating employees that we hire in different countries into our culture.\n\nPandemics and public health crises affecting the geographies where our or our customers’ operations are located can have an adverse impact on our business.\n\nTerrorist attacks and other acts of violence or war have the potential to directly impact our clients. To the extent that such attacks affect or involve the U.S. or Europe, our business may be significantly impacted, as a majority of our revenue is derived from clients located in those regions.\n\nFurther, South Asia has from time to time experienced instances of civil unrest and hostilities among neighboring countries. Such activities could disrupt communications, make travel more difficult, and create a greater perception that investments in Indian companies involve a higher degree of risk. This, in turn, could have a material adverse effect on the market for the securities of Indian companies, including our equity shares and our ADSs, and on the market for our services.\n\nIf our risk management, business continuity and disaster recovery plans are not effective and our global delivery capabilities are impacted, our business and results of operations may be materially adversely affected, and we may suffer harm to our reputation.\n\nRestrictive changes to immigration laws and/or policies in countries in which we operate, including the United States, may limit outsourcing work, which may hamper our growth and cause our revenue to decline.\n\nThe success of our business is dependent on our ability to attract and retain talented and experienced professionals, and the ability to mobilize them around the world to meet our clients’ needs. It is difficult to predict the political and economic events that could affect immigration laws, or the restrictive impact they could have on obtaining or renewing work visas for our technology professionals. Immigration laws in the countries we operate in are subject to legislative changes, as well as to variations in the standards of application and enforcement due to political forces and economic conditions. Changes in immigration laws to limit the availability of certain work visas or increase visa fees in the key markets in which we operate may impact our ability to staff projects in a timely manner and negatively affect our profitability.\n\nTravel restrictions during pandemics and due to geopolitical conflicts may also negatively impact our employees’ ability to obtain work permits or cause delays in obtaining work permits and travel as required to provide services to our clients.\n\nWe currently have sufficient personnel with valid non-immigrant worker visas and have increased hiring of local employees in the United States to continue services to clients. However, since a large part of our business centers around the United States, changes to U.S. immigration laws, fees and conditions for grant of work permits could make it more difficult to obtain the required non-immigrant work authorizations for our employees that allow us to compete for and provide timely and cost-effective services to our clients in the United States, which in turn could adversely affect our revenues and operating profitability.\n\nFurther, under the U.K.’s Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employees) Regulations, 2006 (“TUPE”), as well as similar employee protection regulations in certain EU jurisdictions, outsourcing arrangements may result in the automatic transfer of employees\n\n-8-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nand related employment liabilities. Dismissals connected with such transfer may, in certain circumstances, give rise to employment-related claims. These regimes may increase the cost and complexity of outsourcing for our customers and, in certain circumstances, could affect our results of operations and financial position.\n\nRecent and continued geopolitical changes, including changes in tariffs and trade policies, where we or our clients operate, and other geopolitical events, conflicts or disruption around the globe, may directly or indirectly hamper our growth.\n\nOur business may be directly or indirectly impacted by geopolitical conditions, including the recent changes in global trade policies by certain countries with large economies, the retaliatory changes taken by affected trading partners, and the prospect for further increases in tariffs and other trade measures by these countries or their trading partners. At this time, the trade and tariff policies of these countries remains fluid. All of these policies are subject to continued change, negotiation, and revision. However, sustained increases in tariffs on imported goods, or further increases in tariffs on imported goods, may result in adverse macroeconomic effects and a material adverse effect on our business and operating results. For example, increased tariffs or retaliatory actions taken by affected countries in response to increased tariffs could directly affect hardware, software, or services we use or develop, or indirectly affect us through impacts on hardware, software, or services that our clients or suppliers use or develop.\n\nIn addition, geopolitical conflicts around the world, including recent escalation of geopolitical tensions, such as in the Middle East, South Asia, and Russia/Ukraine, could also directly or indirectly affect us, our customers, or our suppliers, including through increased use of sanctions, export controls, and other geopolitical tools; impacts on supply chains; and other macroeconomic effects. Heightened instability may contribute to volatility in energy prices, inflationary pressures, supply-chain disruptions and reduced business confidence, which could lead clients to delay, reduce or reprioritize technology spending. In addition, such developments may increase operational, regulatory, cybersecurity and compliance risks, affect workforce mobility and business continuity, and disrupt third-party vendors or service providers. Any of these factors could materially and adversely affect our revenues, results of operations, cash flows and financial condition.\n\nRisks Related to Our Contractual Obligations\n\nWe may be subject to litigation and be required to pay damages for deficient services or for violating IP rights, data breach or breach of confidentiality.\n\nWe may be subject to customer audits on quality of service and required to pay damages or face litigations for losses caused by deficient services. We may be liable to our clients for damages or termination of contract if we are unable to address disruption in services to our clients with adequate business continuity plans. We may not be aware if our employees have misappropriated and/or misused IP, and their actions could result in third-party claims against us for IP misappropriation and/or infringement. We may also be subject to litigation or damages for violating or misusing our clients’ IP rights or for breaches of third-party IP rights or confidential information (including but not limited to proprietary data and personally identifiable information) or for wrong decisions or actions taken due to AI solutions implemented by us. Further, our contracts often contain provisions pursuant to which we must indemnify our clients for such third-party breaches of IP, data breach or breach of confidentiality pursuant to our contracts. Additionally, any failure in a client’s system could result in a claim for substantial damages against us, regardless of our responsibility for such failure. Although we attempt to limit our contractual liability for damages in rendering our services, we cannot be assured that such limitations on liability will be enforceable in all cases, or that they will otherwise protect us from liability for consequential and other damages. Such scenarios could require us to pay damages, enter into expensive arrangements or modify services, causing significant damage to our reputation and adversely affecting our results of operations.\n\nSome of our long-term client contracts contain benchmarking and most favored customer provisions which, if triggered, could result in lower contractual revenues and profitability in the future.\n\nSome of our client contracts contain benchmarking and most favored customer provisions. The benchmarking provisions allow a customer in certain circumstances to request a study prepared by an agreed upon third-party comparing our pricing, performance and efficiency gains for delivered contract services against the comparable services of an agreed upon list of other service providers. Based on the results of the benchmark study and depending on the reasons for any unfavorable variance, we may be required to reduce our pricing for future services to be performed for the remainder of the contract term, which could have an adverse impact on our revenues and results. Most favored customer provisions require us to give existing customers updated terms in the event we enter into more favorable agreements with certain other customers, which limits our ability to freely enter into agreements and could have an adverse impact on our revenues and results.\n\n-9-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nOur client contracts are often conditional upon our performance, which, if unsatisfactory due to any reasons, could result in lower revenues than previously anticipated.\n\nOur client contracts may have incentive-based or other pricing terms that condition some or all of our fees on our ability to meet defined performance milestones or service levels. Our failure to meet these milestones or a client’s expectations in such performance-based contracts especially due to dependencies on the client not clearly articulated in the contract, may result in us not being able to raise invoice on the client for expended effort, which may lead not only to a less profitable or an unprofitable engagement but also penalties or fines impacting our revenues, operating profits and cash flows. Additionally, we may experience financial losses in contracts which are linked to our clients' future business outcomes or based on assumptions which are not realized.\n\nOur work with government clients exposes us to additional risks inherent in the government contracting environment.\n\nOur clients include national, provincial, state and local governmental entities. Our government work carries various risks inherent in the government contracting process, which may affect our operating profitability. These risks include, but are not limited to, the following:\n\n•\nGovernment entities often reserve the right to audit our contract costs, including allocated indirect costs, and conduct inquiries and investigations of our business practices with respect to our government contracts. If the client finds that the costs are not chargeable, then we will not be allowed to bill for them, or the cost must be refunded to the client if it has already been paid to us. Findings from an audit may also result in prospective adjustments of previously agreed upon rates for our work and may affect our future margins.\n\n•\nIf a government client discovers improper or illegal activities in the course of audits or investigations, we may become subject to various civil and criminal penalties and administrative sanctions, which may include termination of contracts, forfeiture of profits, suspension of payments, fines and suspensions or unilateral debarment from doing business with other agencies of that government. The inherent limitations of internal controls may not prevent or detect all improper or illegal activities, regardless of their adequacy, and therefore we can only mitigate, and not eliminate, this risk.\n\n•\nGovernment contracts are often subject to more extensive scrutiny and publicity than contracts with commercial clients. Negative publicity related to our government contracts, regardless of its accuracy, may further damage our business by affecting our ability to compete for new contracts among commercial and governmental entities.\n\n•\nPolitical and economic factors such as pending elections, changes in leadership among key governmental decision makers, revisions to governmental tax policies, efforts to reduce government spending, reduced tax revenues and public health crises, can affect the number and terms of new government contracts signed.\n\n•\nTerms and conditions of government contracts tend to be more onerous and are often more difficult to negotiate than those for commercial contracts.\n\n•\nGovernment contracts may not include a cap on direct or consequential damages, which could cause additional risk and expense in these contracts.\n\n•\nAgreements with government clients may be subject to periodic funding approval. Funding reductions or delays could adversely impact public sector demand for our offerings.\n\n•\nParticipation in government contracts could subject us to stricter regulatory requirements, which may increase our cost of compliance.\n\n•\nDelays in acceptances of delivery milestones or release of payments could adversely affect our cashflows.\n\nMany of our client contracts can be terminated without cause, with little or no notice and without termination charges, which could negatively impact our revenue and profitability.\n\nOur clients typically retain us on a non-exclusive, project-by-project basis. Some of our client contracts, including those that are on a fixed-price, fixed-time frame basis, can be terminated with or without cause, with as little as 15 days’ notice and without termination-related penalties. Most of our contracts with clients are typically limited to discrete projects without any commitment to a specific volume of business or future work. Our business is dependent on the decisions and actions of our clients, and there are a number of factors that might result in the termination of a project or the loss of a client that are outside of our control, including:\n\n•\nthe business or financial condition of our clients or the economy generally;\n\n•\na change in strategic priorities, resulting in a reduced level of IT spending;\n\n•\na reduction in discretionary IT spending;\n\n•\na demand for price reductions;\n\n-10-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\n•\na change in outsourcing strategy such as moving to client in-house IT departments or to our competitors; and\n\n•\nconsolidation of IT spending by our clients, whether arising out of mergers and acquisitions, or otherwise.\n\nLarger projects may involve multiple engagements or stages, and there is a risk that a client may choose not to retain us for subsequent stages or may cancel or delay subsequent planned engagements. Further, we may not be able to sell additional services to existing clients.\n\nLonger‑term, larger and more complex contracts, including our managed services contracts, generally require a longer notice period for termination and may provide for the payment of an early termination charge; however, such charges, if any, may not be sufficient to offset the costs incurred by us or to compensate for the loss of anticipated revenues and profits that we would have otherwise realized over the remaining term of the contract.\n\nTermination of client relationships, particularly relationships with our significant customers, would have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition.\n\nAdverse changes to our relationships with key alliance partners could adversely affect our revenues and results of operations.\n\nWe have alliances with companies whose capabilities complement our own. A significant portion of our service offerings are based on technology or software provided by our alliance partners. The priorities and objectives of our alliance partners may differ from ours. As most of our alliance relationships are non-exclusive, they may in the future decide to compete with us, form exclusive or more favorable arrangements with our competitors or otherwise reduce our access to their products, thereby impairing our ability to provide the services and solutions demanded by clients. In addition, our alliance partners could experience reduced demand for their technology or software, including responses to changes in technology, which could impact related demand for our services. If we do not obtain the expected benefits from our alliance relationships, or if we are unable to enter into new alliances for any reason, we may be less competitive, our ability to offer attractive service offerings to our clients may be negatively affected, and our revenues and results of operations could be adversely affected.\n\nRisks Related to Our Investments\n\nOur business will suffer if we fail to anticipate and develop new services and enhance existing services in order to keep pace with rapid changes in technology and the industries on which we focus.\n\nThe IT services market is characterized by rapid technological changes, evolving industry standards, changing client preferences and new product and service introductions. Our future success will depend on our ability to anticipate these advances and enhance our existing offerings or develop new product and service offerings to meet client needs. We may not be successful in anticipating or responding to these advances on a timely basis, or, if we do respond, the services or technologies we develop may not be successful in the marketplace. We may also be unsuccessful in stimulating customer demand for new and upgraded products or seamlessly managing new product introductions or transitions. Further, products, services or technologies that are developed by our competitors, including emerging companies offering specialized services with effective and targeted allocation of technical, marketing and financial resources, may render our services non-competitive or obsolete. Our failure to address the demands of the rapidly evolving information technology environment, particularly with respect to AI including generative AI (“GenAI”), digital technology, the internet of things (“IoT”) (including 5G), infrastructure and network engineering, intelligent connected products, digital engineering and manufacturing, edge computing, augmented reality, automation, blockchain and quantum computing or as-a-service solutions could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition.\n\nOur use of AI technologies may not be successful and may present business, financial, legal, and reputational risks.\n\nWe increasingly use AI technologies, including generative and agentic or autonomous AI systems, in our client offerings and internal operations. The development, adoption, and use of AI technologies remain uncertain and evolving, and we may not be able to successfully develop, deploy, or scale AI‑enabled solutions or realize the anticipated benefits. Any inability to innovate or integrate these technologies effectively, or the failure of such technologies to perform as expected, could adversely affect our competitive position, operational efficiency, and financial results.\n\nAI‑driven automation, efficiency gains and increased client self‑service may reduce demand for certain services we provide and may adversely affect pricing, margins, service levels or the mix of services delivered. The adoption of AI may also intensify competition and lower barriers to entry, enabling competitors, including traditional IT service providers, hyperscale software vendors, startups and other market participants, to offer similar or substitute services more efficiently or at lower cost. In addition, some clients may develop or expand internal AI capabilities rather than rely on third‑party service providers, which could further reduce demand for our services and adversely affect our revenues and market position.\n\n-11-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nAI technologies may be flawed, and algorithms, models or datasets may be insufficient, biased or inaccurate, which could result in unexpected, low‑quality or otherwise inadequate outputs. Certain AI systems may operate with limited human intervention, increasing the risk of unintended outcomes. Deficiencies in AI‑enabled solutions could result in delays, quality issues, failure to meet contractual service levels or milestones, service credits, disputes, claims, loss of business or contract termination.\n\nOur use of AI technologies may also increase legal and regulatory exposure. Clients may seek enhanced contractual protections relating to AI use, including representations, warranties, indemnities, audit rights and obligations concerning intellectual property ownership, data usage, cybersecurity, regulatory compliance and AI‑generated outputs. If AI‑enabled solutions cause harm to clients, their customers or other third parties, we could be subject to regulatory action, litigation, financial liability, reputational harm or increased compliance costs. Further, evolving AI‑specific laws and regulations, including the European Union Artificial Intelligence Act (“EU AI Act”) and similar frameworks in other jurisdictions, may impose additional governance, documentation, monitoring and reporting requirements, increasing costs and limiting the deployment of AI solutions.\n\nOur AI offerings rely significantly on third‑party technologies, platforms, data sources, models, open‑source software and partner ecosystems. Dependence on such third parties may expose us to risks relating to service disruptions, licensing or usage restrictions, pricing changes, cybersecurity incidents, regulatory non‑compliance or withdrawal of products or services, which could adversely affect service delivery, costs or client relationships.\n\nThe successful use of AI technologies also depends on our ability to attract, train and retain personnel with appropriate AI and digital skills. Competition for such talent is intense, and shortages or attrition could increase costs, delay execution, reduce service quality and limit scalability.\n\nAlthough we have established governance frameworks and principles for the responsible use of AI technologies, and taken steps designed to comply with AI-specific laws and regulations, these measures may not prevent all risks, including those relating to bias, misuse, data privacy, security vulnerabilities or deficiencies in development, testing, monitoring or lifecycle management, which could result in claims, demands, litigation, regulatory investigations and other proceedings, as well as require us to incur substantial costs, a diversion of resources, fines, penalties and other damages. Any of these factors could materially and adversely affect our business, results of operations, financial condition, cash flows and reputation.\n\nWe are making substantial investments in new facilities and physical infrastructures, and our profitability could be reduced if our business does not grow proportionately.\n\nWe have invested substantially in construction or expansion of software development facilities and physical infrastructure in anticipation of growth in our business. The total amount of cash outflow towards investment in property, plant and equipment in fiscal year 2026 was ₹ 15,603 million (U.S.$ 166 million). Additionally, as of March 31, 2026, we had contractual commitments of ₹ 9,416 million (U.S.$ 100 million) related to capital expenditures on construction or expansion of our software development and other facilities. We may encounter cost overruns or project delays in connection with new facilities and these expansions may increase our fixed costs. If we are unable to grow our business and revenues to sufficiently offset the increased expenditures, our profitability could be reduced.\n\nWe may invest in companies for strategic reasons that may not be successful or meet our expectations.\n\nWe make non-controlling investments in companies which are important to our business strategy and to complement some of our business initiatives. These may include investments in non-marketable securities of early-stage companies that carry a significant degree of risk and may not become liquid for several years from the date of investment. These investments may not generate financial returns or may not yield the desired business outcome. The success of our investment in a company is sometimes dependent on the availability of additional funding on favorable terms or a liquidity event such as an initial public offering. We may record impairment charges in relation to our strategic investments which will have a negative impact on our financial position.\n\nInvestments in companies where we do not have majority ownership expose us to decisions made by others, as we have a lesser degree of control. This may expose us to additional reputational, financial, legal, compliance or operational risks. This could impact our ability to align the strategic goals of such companies with our goals and may impact the returns on our investment. We may also be required to exit such investments at inopportune times or make further investments based on current shareholder agreements. Such further investments may have to be made at a time when the venture is financially struggling, and this may erode or dilute its value to our shareholders.\n\nWe may engage in future acquisitions that may not be successful or meet our expectations.\n\nWe have acquired, and in the future may acquire or make investments in, complementary businesses, technologies, services or products, or enter into strategic partnerships or joint ventures with parties that we believe can provide access to new markets, capabilities or assets. After reaching an agreement for the acquisition of a business, we are subject to the satisfaction of pre-closing conditions as\n\n-12-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nwell as certain regulatory and governmental approvals on acceptable terms, which, if not satisfied or obtained, may prevent us from completing the transaction. Such regulatory and governmental approvals may be required in jurisdictions around the world, and any delays in the timing of such approvals could materially delay or prevent the transaction. Changes in competition laws in India and abroad could also impact our acquisition plans by prohibiting potential transactions which could otherwise be beneficial for us.\n\nThe acquisition of new businesses subjects us to many risks, and we can provide no assurances that any such acquisition will be successful or meet our expectations. If it does not, we may suffer losses, dilute value to shareholders, may not be able to take advantage of appropriate investment opportunities or complete other transactions on terms commercially acceptable to us. It may take longer than expected to realize the full benefits from these transactions and arrangements, such as increased revenue or synergies, or the benefits may ultimately be smaller than we expected, which could adversely affect our financial position.\n\nDespite our due diligence process, we may fail to discover significant issues around an acquired company’s IP, service offerings, customer relationships, employee matters, accounting practices or regulatory compliances. We may also fail to discover liabilities that are not properly disclosed to us or we inadequately assess in our due diligence efforts or liabilities that may arise out of regulatory non-compliance, contractual obligations, IP, terminated employees, current or former clients or other third parties, liabilities resulting from an acquisition target’s previous activities, or from an acquisition’s internal controls related to financial reporting, disclosure requirements or cybersecurity and information security environment. We cannot predict or guarantee that our efforts will be effective or will protect us from liability. We may be unable to get indemnification protection or other contractual protections or relief for any material liabilities associated with our acquisitions or investments. If any of these circumstances occur, they could result in unexpected regulatory or legal exposure, including litigation with new or existing clients, unfavorable accounting treatment, unexpected increases in taxes or other adverse effects on our relationships with clients and our business, and could harm our operating results.\n\nWe may increase our interest expense and leverage if we incur additional debt to pay for an acquisition. Use of cash to pay for acquisitions may limit other potential uses of cash, including stock repurchases and dividend payments.\n\nWe may be required to integrate any acquired entities into our framework of internal control over financial reporting and disclosure controls and procedures. Integration of acquired entities could be a time-consuming and expensive process. We could have difficulty in integrating the acquired services, solutions, technologies or products into our operations. We could also have difficulties in assimilating and retaining the key personnel, consolidating and integrating IT infrastructure or operations of the acquired companies.\n\nWe may face difficulties in meeting the needs of the acquired company’s customers and partners following completion of the acquisition. We may face litigation or other claims arising out of our acquisitions, including disputes with regard to earn-outs or other closing adjustments. These difficulties could disrupt our ongoing business, distract our management and employees, and increase our expenses.\n\nGoodwill and acquisition related intangibles that we carry on our balance sheet could give rise to significant impairment charges in the future.\n\nThe amount of goodwill and intangible assets in our Consolidated Financial Statements has increased significantly in recent years, primarily on account of acquisitions. Goodwill is subject to impairment review at least annually and acquired intangibles are assessed for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount may not be recoverable, which may lead to impairment charges in the future. Any significant impairment charges could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations.\n\nIndian law limits our ability to raise capital outside India and may limit the ability of others to acquire us, which could prevent us from operating our business or entering into a transaction that is in the best interests of our shareholders.\n\nIndian law constrains our ability to raise capital outside of India through the issuance of equity or convertible debt securities. Generally, any foreign investment in, or an acquisition of, an Indian company under the applicable foreign exchange regulations does not require approval from the Reserve Bank of India (“RBI”) and relevant government authorities in India, subject to compliance of prescribed conditions. The Government of India (“GoI”) currently does not mandate prior approvals for IT companies such as ours. However, by notification dated April 22, 2020, the GoI has amended its foreign direct investment (“FDI”) policy to state that investment by a non-resident entity of a country which shares a land border with India, or where the beneficial ownership of an investment into India is situated in or is a citizen of any such countries, shall be under the ‘Government Route’, which requires GoI approval prior to investment. Further, in case of transfer of ownership of any existing or future FDI in an entity in India, directly or indirectly, resulting in the beneficial ownership falling within the above-mentioned restriction/purview such subsequent change in beneficial ownership will also require GoI approval. If we are required to seek the approval of the GoI and the GoI does not approve the proposed investment or implements a limit on the foreign equity ownership of IT companies, our ability to seek and obtain additional equity investment by foreign investors will be limited. In addition, these restrictions, if applied to us, may prevent us from entering into a transaction, such as an acquisition by a non-Indian company, which would otherwise be beneficial for our Company and the holders of our equity shares and ADSs.\n\n-13-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nRisks Related to our Cost Structure\n\nIf our pricing structures do not accurately anticipate the cost, complexity and duration of our work, then our contracts could be unprofitable.\n\nWe negotiate pricing terms with our clients utilizing a range of pricing structures and conditions. Depending on the particular contract, we may use time and materials pricing, fixed-price arrangements, or hybrid contracts with features of both pricing models. We also undertake element or transaction-based pricing, which relies on a certain scale of operations to be profitable for us. Our pricing is highly dependent on the client and our internal forecasts and predictions about our projects and the marketplace, which might be based on limited data and could be inaccurate.\n\nThere is a risk that we will underprice our contracts, fail to accurately estimate the duration, complexity and costs of performing the work or fail to accurately assess the risks associated with potential contracts. The risk is greatest when pricing our outsourcing contracts, as many of our outsourcing projects entail the coordination of operations and workforce in multiple locations, utilizing workforce with different skill sets and competencies across geographically distributed service centers. Furthermore, when work gets outsourced, we occasionally take over employees/assets from our clients and assume responsibility for one or more of our clients’ business processes. Our pricing, cost and profit margin estimates on outsourced work frequently include anticipated long-term cost savings from transformational initiatives and other endeavors that we expect to achieve and sustain over the life of the outsourcing contract, but may not generate revenue in the short term.\n\nWe offer a portion of our services on a fixed-price, fixed-time frame basis, rather than on a time-and-materials basis. Although we use our specified software engineering processes and rely on our past project experience to reduce the risks associated with estimating, planning and performing such projects, we bear the risks of cost overruns, including increased costs of third parties, completion delays and wage inflation in connection with these projects, which may have a material adverse effect on our profitability.\n\nWe may also fail to obtain renewals or provide ongoing services, the loss of which prevents us from realizing from long-term cost savings. In particular, any increased or unexpected costs, or wide fluctuations compared to our original estimates, delays or failures to achieve anticipated cost savings, or unexpected risks we encounter in connection with the performance of this work, including those caused by factors outside our control, could make these contracts less profitable or unprofitable, which could have an adverse effect on our profit margin.\n\nErrors, defects or disruptions in our services could raise our costs, diminish our service capacities and harm our financial results.\n\nIf flaws in design, function or maintenance of our services were to occur, we could experience a rate of failure that would result in substantial repair, replacement or service costs and potential damage to our reputation. Although we continue to improve our services through quality control, innovation and product testing, there can be no assurances that our efforts to monitor, develop, modify and implement appropriate testing for errors and upgrading processes will be sufficient to prevent us from having to incur substantial repair, replacement or service costs, or from a disruption in our ability to provide services, either of which could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations or financial condition.\n\nOur profitability could suffer if we are unable to continue to successfully manage our costs.\n\nOur ability to improve or maintain our profitability is dependent on successful management of our costs. Our cost management strategies include maintaining appropriate alignment between the demand for our services and our resource capacity, optimizing the costs of service delivery through automation and deployment of tools, optimizing utilization of existing facilities, relocating non-client facing employees to lower-cost locations and effectively leveraging our sales and marketing and general and administrative costs. There is no guarantee that these, or other cost-management efforts will be successful, that our productivity will be enhanced, or that we will achieve desired levels of profitability. If we are not able to mitigate rising employee compensation costs by passing such increases to clients, or increase our revenues sufficiently to offset increasing costs, or maintain high utilization rates for our employees or precisely forecast demand for our services to optimize our bench, our results of operations could be adversely affected.\n\n-14-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nWage increases in India or our inability to hire in low-cost locations may diminish our competitive advantage against companies located in the United States and Europe and may reduce our profit margins.\n\nOur wage costs in India have historically been significantly lower than wage costs in the U.S. and Europe for comparably skilled professionals, and this has been one of our competitive advantages. However, wage increases in India may prevent us from sustaining this competitive advantage and may negatively affect our profit margins. We have historically experienced significant competition for employees from large multinational companies that have established and continue to establish offshore operations in India, as well as from companies within India. We may need to increase the levels of our employee compensation more rapidly than in the past to retain talent. Unless we are able to continue to increase the efficiency and productivity of our employees over the long term, wage increases may reduce our profit margins. Furthermore, any inability to increase the proportion of employees with less experience, or source talent from other low-cost locations, like Eastern Europe, China or Southeast Asia could also negatively affect our profits.\n\nOur defined benefit plan assets are subject to market volatility.\n\nOur employee compensation policies include certain defined benefit plans where it is our obligation to provide agreed benefits to the employees. These obligations are funded through certain plan assets which carry actuarial and investment risks. These risks include adverse salary growth or demographic experience, which can result in an increase in cost of providing these benefits to employees in future. The valuation of plan assets considers an expected return which is based on expectation of the average long-term rate of return on investments of the fund during the estimated term of the obligations. Should we not achieve the expected rate of return on the plan assets or if the plan experiences a decline in the fair value of its assets, we may be required to contribute assets to the plan which could adversely affect our results of operations and financial position.\n\nExchange rate fluctuations in various currencies in which we do business could negatively impact our revenue and operating results. Our financial condition and results of operations may be harmed if we do not successfully reduce such risks through the use of derivative financial instruments.\n\nOur IT Services business contributes 99.3% of our revenue. A significant portion of our revenue from this segment is derived from transactions in foreign currencies, including the U.S. Dollar, the Pound Sterling, the Euro, the Canadian Dollar and the Australian Dollar while a large portion of our costs are in Indian Rupees. The exchange rate between the Indian Rupee and foreign currencies has fluctuated significantly in recent years and may continue to fluctuate in the future. As our financial statements are presented in Indian Rupees, such fluctuations could have a material impact on our reported results. Appreciation of the Indian Rupee against foreign currencies can therefore adversely affect our revenue and competitive position and can adversely impact our operating results. We generate approximately 39% of our IT Services revenues in non-U.S. Dollar currencies, and the exchange rate fluctuations between these currencies and the U.S. Dollar can affect our revenues and growth, as expressed in U.S. Dollar terms.\n\nA significant portion of our debt is in foreign currencies. We may also undertake hedging strategies to mitigate exposure of exchange rate risk relating to foreign currency borrowings, including entering into interest rate swaps. If the value of the Indian Rupee declines, the size of our debt obligations and interest expenses in Indian Rupees may increase. This will adversely impact our net income. We also experience other market risks, including changes in the interest rates of the securities that we own. However, if our strategies to reduce market risks are not successful, our financial condition and operating results may be harmed.\n\nWe use derivative financial instruments to reduce or mitigate these risks where possible. While hedging instruments may mitigate our exposure to fluctuations in currency exchange rates to a certain extent, we potentially forego benefits that might result from market fluctuations in currency exposures. These hedging transactions can also result in substantial losses. Such losses could occur under various circumstances, including, without limitation, any circumstances in which a counterparty does not perform its obligations under the applicable hedging arrangement (despite having International Swaps and Derivatives Association agreements in place with each of our hedging counterparties), there are currency fluctuations or the arrangement is imperfect or ineffective. Further, the policies of the RBI may change from time to time which may limit our ability to hedge our foreign currency exposures adequately.\n\nWe are exposed to fluctuations in the market values of our investment portfolio.\n\nWe maintain an investment portfolio of various holdings, types and maturities. These investments are subject to general credit, liquidity, market and interest rate risks. Deterioration of the credit rating of counterparties and in the credit as well as the debt capital markets in general due to economic turmoil or other global events could result in volatility of our investment earnings and impairments to our investment portfolio, which could negatively impact our financial condition and net income. Further, fluctuations in the interest rate environment based on changes in the RBI’s monetary policy could affect the interest income and thereby our profitability.\n\n-15-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nWe may not achieve the expected benefits of our restructuring and cost optimization initiatives, which could adversely affect our business.\n\nWe have undertaken, and may continue to undertake, restructuring, cost optimization and organizational initiatives to realign our cost structure with the evolving needs of our business and to improve operational efficiency. We may not be able to achieve the cost savings or other benefits that we anticipate from these initiatives within the expected timeframe, or at all. Even where such initiatives are successfully implemented, the anticipated benefits may not be fully reflected in our financial condition, results of operations or cash flows.\n\nRestructuring and cost optimization initiatives may involve significant costs, including employee separation costs and other restructuring‑related expenses, which could adversely affect our earnings and cash flows in the periods in which such costs are incurred. Further, these initiatives require compliance with applicable labor and employment laws and regulations across the jurisdictions in which we operate, which may increase execution complexity and costs.\n\nIf we are unable to effectively manage or realize the expected benefits of our restructuring and cost optimization initiatives, our competitive position, business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows could be adversely affected.\n\nRisks Related to Our Workforce\n\nOur success depends in large part upon the strength of our management team and other highly skilled professionals. If we fail to attract, retain and manage transition of these personnel, our business may be unable to grow and our revenue could decline.\n\nThe continued efforts of the senior members of our management team are critical to our success. Our future performance and customer relationships may be affected by any disruptions in the continued service of our directors and executive officers.\n\nOur ability to execute project engagements and to obtain new clients depends in large part on our ability to attract, train, motivate and retain highly skilled professionals, especially senior technical personnel, project managers and software engineers across a large and diverse workforce with the skills and expertise required to meet evolving client demands globally. Costs associated with recruiting and training employees are significant. We believe that there is significant competition for professionals with the skills necessary to perform the services we offer, particularly in the locations in which we have operations, which may also impact our ability to attract and retain personnel. Additionally, we offer a hybrid working model to our employees. If we implement and enforce policies that make full-time office presence mandatory for employees, this may impact our ability to attract talent.\n\nIf we cannot hire and retain technical personnel, our ability to bid on and obtain new projects and to continue to expand our business will be impaired and our revenue could decline. Our compensation policies include equity-based incentive compensation plans that are designed to reward high-performing personnel for their contributions and provide incentives for them to remain with us. If the anticipated value of such incentives does not materialize because of volatility or lack of positive performance in our stock price, or if our total compensation package is not viewed as being competitive, our ability to attract and retain personnel could be adversely affected.\n\nWe may not be able to hire and retain enough skilled and experienced employees to replace those who leave, which may increase our reliance on subcontractors to fulfill demand and could negatively impact our profitability. Additionally, we may not be able to re-skill, reassign or retain our employees to keep pace with continuous changes in technology such as AI, industry and macroeconomic developments, evolving standards and changing client preferences. If we are unable to maintain an employee environment that is competitive and appealing, it could have an adverse effect on engagement and retention. Our revenues, results of operations and financial condition could be adversely affected if we are unable to manage employee hiring and attrition to achieve a stable and efficient workforce structure.\n\nChanges in policies or laws may also affect our ability to attract and retain personnel and may hinder our ability to hire adequate numbers of qualified technology professionals.\n\nRisks Related to Our Operations\n\nIf we do not effectively improve our administrative, operational and financial processes and systems to manage our business operations, the value of our shareholders’ investment may be harmed.\n\nTo effectively manage our business operations, we will be required to continuously develop and improve our administrative, operational and financial processes. As a result of our growing operations, we face and expect to continue to face challenges such as:\n\n•\neffectively managing our talent acquisition, procurement, supply chain and vendor management processes;\n\n-16-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\n•\nmaintaining an effective internal control system and properly educating and training employees to mitigate the risk of individuals engaging in unlawful or fraudulent activity or otherwise exposing us to unacceptable business risks;\n\n•\ndeveloping and improving our internal administrative infrastructure, particularly our financial, operational, communications and other internal systems including human resources (“HR”) and people related systems, data management in our IT applications and Management Information Systems, and transitioning from historical systems to new or improved infrastructure that may require additional resources and efforts to implement, troubleshoot or otherwise integrate into existing processes and procedures; and\n\n•\nassimilating and integrating disparate IT systems, personnel and employment practices, our culture and values, and operations of acquired companies.\n\nWe are subject to stringent and changing laws, regulations, standards, and contractual obligations related to privacy, data protection and cybersecurity. Our actual or perceived failure to comply with such obligations could harm our business.\n\nWe are subject to a variety of federal, state, local and international laws, rules, and regulations, as well as industry standards, internal and external privacy policies and contractual obligations to third parties, relating to the collection, use, retention, security, disclosure, transfer, storage and other processing of personal information and other data. Most jurisdictions in which we operate have established their own privacy, data protection and cybersecurity legal frameworks with which we and our customers must comply.\n\nFor example, the EU has adopted the General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”), which went into effect in May 2018, and together with national legislation, regulations and guidelines of the EU member states, contains numerous requirements relating to the processing of personal data of EU data subjects, including the increased jurisdictional reach of the European Commission, more robust obligations, additional requirements for data protection compliance programs by companies, and significantly increased fines and penalties and rights for data subjects to claim compensation. EU member states are tasked under the GDPR to enact, and have enacted, certain legislation that adds to or further interprets the GDPR requirements and potentially extends our obligations and potential liability for failing to meet such obligations. Among other requirements, the GDPR regulates transfers of personal data subject to the GDPR to countries outside the European Economic Area (“EEA”) that have not been found to provide adequate protection to such personal data. The GDPR also introduced numerous privacy-related changes for companies operating in the EU, including greater control for data subjects (for example, the “right to be forgotten”), increased data portability for EU consumers, data breach notification requirements and increased fines. In particular, under the GDPR, fines of up to 20 million euros or 4% of the annual global revenue of the noncompliant company, whichever is greater, could be imposed for violations of certain of the GDPR’s requirements. Such penalties are in addition to any civil litigation claims by customers and data subjects.\n\nThe EU also has enacted directives and regulations addressing cybersecurity. For example, the Network and Information Security Directive II (“NIS2”), adopted in 2023, aims to enhance cybersecurity across critical infrastructure and essential services in the EU. It expands the scope of the 2016 NIS Directive to include additional sectors while enforcing stricter governance and accountability requirements. Additionally, the Digital Operational Resiliency Act became effective in January 2025, and aims to establish a universal framework for managing and mitigating information and communication technology risk that will apply to entities in the financial sector and their third-party cloud service providers.\n\nThe EU also has enacted regulations addressing online services. For example, the EU’s Data Act (“Data Act”) became applicable in 2025. Compliance with the Data Act may require us to adjust contract terms with business partners and enable data sharing in certain instances. Further, the EU’s Digital Services Act (“DSA”) imposes requirements on digital platforms to protect consumers and their rights online. These obligations may result in additional compliance and operational costs.\n\nData processing in the U.K. is governed by a U.K. version of the GDPR (combining the GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018) (“U.K. GDPR”), with fines and enforcement mechanisms similar to those of the GDPR. In 2021, the European Commission issued an adequacy decision, pursuant to which personal data generally may be transferred from the EU to the U.K. without restriction; however, this adequacy decision must be renewed and is subject to modification or revocation in the interim. In 2025, the U.K. introduced the Data (Use and Access) Act, which reforms U.K. data protection laws including the U.K. GDPR and includes some additional compliance obligations.\n\nOther jurisdictions in which we operate, including China, Singapore, the Philippines, Hong Kong, Canada, and Australia, have enacted robust legal regimes relating to privacy, data protection, and cybersecurity, many of which provide for significant penalties and other sanctions for noncompliance. Certain of these regimes, including, without limitation, the GDPR and U.K. GDPR, provide for restrictions on transferring data outside of those jurisdictions to many other jurisdictions. The regulatory framework relating to cross-border data transfer has evolved significantly in recent years. For example, in 2020, the European Court of Justice (“CJEU”) struck down the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield framework, which provided companies with a mechanism to comply with data protection requirements when transferring personal data from the EEA to the United States. In the same decision, the CJEU imposed additional obligations on companies when relying on standard contractual clauses approved by the European Commission for use in legitimizing personal data transfers from the EEA to the U.S. The European Commission and U.K. Information Commissioner’s Office since have issued new standard contractual clauses that account for the CJEU’s 2020 decision, with companies relying on that transfer mechanism required to\n\n-17-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nput them in place. Several other laws and regulations enacted in recent years also provide for restrictions on cross-border data transfers, and some of these regimes provide for data localization, under which certain data is required to be maintained within the applicable country. We may be required to take additional steps to address data localization and data transfer issues, including engaging in additional contract negotiations and implementing additional data storage or processing infrastructure, and be subject to increasing costs of compliance and limitations on our customers and us. Additionally, current or modified laws or regulations relating to data transfers and data localization, and related developments, including legal challenges and judicial decisions, may serve as a basis for our data handling practices, or those of our customers and service providers, to be challenged, and may otherwise adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations.\n\nIn the U.S., privacy laws continue to evolve and could require us to modify our data processing practices and policies and expose us to further regulatory or operational burdens. For example, the California Consumer Privacy Act (“CCPA”), as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act, imposes obligations on companies that process California residents’ personal information, including obligations to provide certain disclosures to such residents, and creates new consumer rights, including relating to the access to, deletion of and sharing of personal information collected by covered businesses. The CCPA provides for civil penalties for violations, as well as a private right of action for certain data breaches that result in the loss of personal information. This private right of action may increase the likelihood of, and risks associated with, data breach litigation. Numerous other states have proposed or enacted legislation similar to the CCPA. The U.S. federal government also is contemplating federal privacy legislation.\n\nFurthermore, India passed the Digital Personal Data Protection Act in August 2023 (the “DPDP Act”), the country’s first comprehensive data protection law, the impacts of which potentially may be far-ranging and impactful upon our business, and which is anticipated to provide for substantial penalties. The Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDPA) 2023, coupled with the 2025 Rules, provides an 18-month timeline for full compliance, leading to full enforcement by May 13, 2027. We expect the DPDP Act to add additional complexity, variation in requirements, restrictions and potential legal risk, require additional investment of resources in compliance programs, and could result in increased compliance costs or changes in business practices and policies.\n\nAs a general matter, the laws, rules, regulations, standards, and other actual and asserted obligations relating to privacy, data protection and cybersecurity to which we may be subject, or that otherwise apply to our business, are constantly evolving, and we expect that there will continue to be new proposed laws, regulations and industry standards concerning these matters in India, the EU, the U.K., the U.S. and other jurisdictions in which we operate, both general and in relation to technological and other developments, including AI (and including, in particular, the EU’s AI Act), the use of algorithms and automated decision making, digital identity, and blockchain technologies. We also anticipate remaining to be subject to related contractual obligations that may be burdensome and which, in many cases, may provide for liability that is unlimited. We cannot fully predict the impact of laws, rules, and regulations, including those that may be modified or enacted in the future, or new or evolving industry standards, contractual obligations, or other actual or asserted obligations, relating to cybersecurity, privacy or data protection or processing on our business or operations. These laws, regulations, standards and obligations have required us to modify our relevant practices and policies and to incur substantial costs and expenses in an effort to comply, and we expect to continue to incur such costs and expenses in the future and anticipate finding it necessary or appropriate to further modify our relevant practices and policies. Any actual or perceived failure by us or our customers or service providers to comply with laws, regulations, rules, standards, contractual obligations or other actual or asserted obligations to which we are or are alleged to be subject relating to privacy, data protection or cybersecurity could result in claims, demands and litigation from private parties and regulators, regulatory investigations and other proceedings, as well as significant damage to our reputation that could cause us to lose customers and harm our ability to gain new customers. These could result in substantial costs, diversion of resources, fines, penalties and other damages, and harm to our customer relationships, our market position and our ability to attract new customers. Any of these could harm our business, financial condition and results of operations.\n\nCyberattacks and other security incidents, both real and perceived, impacting the confidentiality and integrity of our information technology and digital infrastructure could lead to loss of reputation and financial obligations.\n\nGiven the high business dependency on our information technology and digital infrastructure to interconnect offices, employee systems, partners and clients for day-to-day business operations, as well as hosting of data and service delivery, any potential cybersecurity or information security breach, incident or event impacting the confidentiality, integrity and availability of this environment could lead to financial loss, disclosure, unavailability, loss, unauthorized use and other processing of data, reputational harm and customer loss, harm to our market position and ability to gain new customers, and legal claims, demands, and litigation, regulatory investigations and other proceedings, and fines, penalties and other damages and liabilities, along with potential impacts to our relationships with our customers and partners. The evolving and multi‑jurisdictional nature of cybersecurity and data protection regulations may increase compliance complexity and associated costs. Cybersecurity incidents could also disrupt service delivery, result in failures to meet contractual service levels, delay or prevent the delivery of services to clients, and adversely affect revenues and customer relationships.\n\n-18-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nWith the rise of connected devices, social media, transition to cloud and use of other emerging technologies and as cyberattacks are becoming increasingly sophisticated (e.g., deepfakes, AI generated social engineering, and malicious use or exploitation of advanced and frontier AI models) the risk of security incidents, phishing and cyberattacks has increased. We have in the past and may in the future be the target of security incidents, phishing and cyberattacks. The threat attack surface is evolving and increasing beyond the enterprise. Cybersecurity incidents, both actual and attempted, involving unauthorized access, brute force attempt, ransomware and other malware, fraud, data leakage, loss of and unauthorized use, alteration and other processing of personal and business data, denial of service and other attacks designed to disrupt systems, exploitation of security vulnerabilities and other weaknesses in systems or programs, errors, omissions, deliberate or accidental acts of our current or former employees, partners, third-party business providers or other stakeholders, both internal and external, are on the rise. Our internal security controls may not be able to keep pace with these evolving threats. Inadequate account security practices may also result in unauthorized access to confidential data. For example, system administrators or user life cycle management solutions may sometimes fail to timely remove employee account access. There may be vulnerabilities in open-source software incorporated into our offerings that may make our offerings susceptible to cyberattacks.\n\nWe face a number of threats to our data centers and networks such as unauthorized access, security breaches and incidents, and other system disruptions, including denial of service and other attacks. It is critical to our business that our infrastructure remains resilient and is perceived by customers to be secure. Despite our security measures, our infrastructure has been and may be vulnerable to attacks by hackers or other disruptive problems, including attacks for which no remedies are available with network security service providers. As an IT services provider, we are an attractive target of cyberattacks designed to impede the performance of our products, penetrate our network security, the security of our internal systems, or that of our customers, misappropriate proprietary information, and/or cause interruption to our services. Geopolitical conflicts compound the risk, we and our third-party business providers may be vulnerable to a heightened risk of cybersecurity attacks, phishing and social engineering attacks, ransomware and other malware, hacking or similar attacks from any nation-state actors, including attacks that could materially disrupt our systems and operations, supply chain, and ability to sell and distribute our services. Our reliance on critical third‑party technology and cloud service providers may increase our exposure to cybersecurity incidents originating from or impacting those providers, over which we may have limited control. We can provide no assurance that our systems or data are or have been fully protected against third-party intrusions, viruses, ransomware or other malicious code, hacker attacks, information or data theft or other similar threats. Any third-party intrusions, viruses, ransomware or other malicious code, hacker attacks, security breaches or incidents, information or data theft, or similar attacks or threats against us and our systems and data, may have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. Breaches of our security measures or accidental or unauthorized loss, unavailability, disclosure or dissemination or other processing of confidential customer data could expose us, our customers or the affected parties to a risk of loss, unavailability, or misuse of this information. Such incidents could also result in the loss or compromise of our proprietary information, intellectual property, methodologies, or trade secrets, which could reduce our competitive advantage. We could be subject to claims, demands, and litigation, termination of contracts, and damages for non-compliance with our client’s information security policies and procedures. In addition, cybersecurity incidents may trigger mandatory notification and reporting obligations to regulators, customers, and other stakeholders across multiple jurisdictions, increasing regulatory scrutiny, compliance costs, and the risk of enforcement actions. Many of our client agreements do not limit our potential liability for breaches of confidentiality. Security breaches may trigger increase in costs of our ongoing efforts to implement and maintain cybersecurity measures and to detect and prevent security breaches and other security-related incidents, and could be required to incur additional costs in the event of actual or perceived security breaches or other security-related incidents, any of which would negatively affect our results of operations. Responding to and remediating cybersecurity incidents may also divert significant management attention and operational resources away from our core business activities.\n\nIf any individual, including our employees, negligently disregards or intentionally breaches our established controls regarding our data or client data, or otherwise mismanages or misappropriates that data, we could face significant litigation, monetary damages, regulatory enforcement actions, fines and/or criminal prosecution in one or more jurisdictions. Additionally, this could cause significant damage to our reputation.\n\nWe cannot guarantee that any security measures that we or third parties on which we rely have implemented will be effective against current or future security threats, or that our systems and networks or those of such third parties have not been breached or otherwise compromised, or that they and any software in our or their supply chains do not contain bugs, vulnerabilities or compromised code that could result in a breach of or disruption to our systems and networks or the systems and networks of third parties that support us or our products or services. If our security measures or those of third parties on which we rely are or are believed to be inadequate or breached or otherwise compromised as a result of third-party action, current or former employee or service provider negligence, error or malfeasance, product defects, phishing or other social engineering techniques, improper user configuration, or otherwise, and this results in, or is believed to result in, unauthorized access to or disclosure, modification, misuse, loss, corruption, unavailability or destruction of our data or our customers’ data, or any other disruption of the confidentiality, integrity or availability of our or our customers’ systems or data, we could face claims, demands and litigation by private parties, regulatory investigations and other proceedings, and incur significant liability to our customers and other parties, and our business, reputation and competitive position may be harmed. Many of our employees have worked remotely in recent years and continue to do so. In order to better support employees working from home or in a hybrid working environment, we have taken steps to enhance our cybersecurity measures. These security control mechanisms may not always be successful, considering the complexity of the environments, inter-dependencies, sophisticated attack methodologies, highly dynamic heterogeneous systems, global digital presence, hosted both in the cloud and on premises, and\n\n-19-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nwork from home arrangements, and we may face increased risks of cyberattacks and security breaches and incidents in connection with remote work.\n\nFurthermore, we could be subject to indemnity claims or other liabilities in connection with an actual or perceived security breach or incident, or other cybersecurity issue, that exceeds our insurance coverage. We also cannot be certain that our insurance coverage will be adequate for liabilities actually incurred, that insurance will continue to be available to us on economically reasonable terms, or at all, or that any insurer will not deny coverage as to any future claim. The successful assertion of one or more large claims against us that exceed available insurance coverage, or the occurrence of changes in our insurance policies, including premium increases or the imposition of large deductible or co-insurance requirements, could have a material adverse effect on our business, including our financial condition, operating results and reputation.\n\nWe may face difficulties in providing end-to-end business solutions for our clients that could cause clients to discontinue their work with us, which in turn could impact our business.\n\nAs we have increased the breadth of our service offerings, we have engaged in larger and more complex projects with our clients. This requires us to establish closer relationships with our clients and potentially with other technology service providers and vendors and to have a more thorough understanding of our clients’ operations. Our ability to establish such relationships will depend on a number of factors, including the proficiency of our IT professionals and our management personnel. Our failure to understand and successfully implement our clients’ requirements, the domain and country-specific laws and regulations which govern the products and services that we provide, or our failure to deliver services which meet the requirements specified by our clients could result in termination of client contracts, reputational harm and/or imposition of penalties or the payment of damages. This may further damage our business by affecting our ability to compete for new contracts with current and prospective clients. We may also be subject to loss of clients due to dependence on alliance partners, subcontractors or third-party product vendors. In projects where we own the end-to-end delivery, we may incur penalties on work performed by our alliance partners, subcontractors or third-party product vendors if they do not meet contractual performance thresholds.\n\nLarger projects may involve multiple engagements or stages, and there is a risk that a client may choose not to retain us for subsequent stages or may cancel or delay subsequent planned engagements. Further, we may not be able to sell additional services to existing clients. Such cancellations or delays make it difficult to plan for project resource requirements, and inaccuracies in such resource planning may have a negative impact on our profitability.\n\nOur insurance coverage may not be adequate to protect us against all potential losses to which we may be subject, and this may have a material adverse effect on our business.\n\nOur insurance policies cover physical loss or damage to our property and equipment arising from a number of specified risks and certain consequential losses, including business interruption, arising from the occurrence of an insured event under the policies. Under our property and equipment policies, damages and losses caused by certain natural disasters, such as earthquakes, acts of terrorism, floods and windstorms are also covered. We also maintain various other types of insurance including, but not limited to, directors’ and officers’ liability insurance, workmen’s compensation insurance, errors and omissions insurance, cyber insurance, representation and warranties insurance in certain acquisitions and marine insurance. We also maintain receivables insurance for some of our clients to reduce losses due to sudden bankruptcy. We maintain insurance on property and equipment in amounts believed to be consistent with industry practices, but we are not fully insured against all such risks. Notwithstanding the insurance coverage that we carry, the occurrence of an event that causes losses in excess of the limits specified in our policies, or losses arising from events not covered by insurance policies, could materially harm our financial condition and future operating results. There can be no assurance that any claims filed, under our insurance policies will be honored fully or timely. Also, our financial condition may be affected to the extent we suffer any loss or damage that is not covered by insurance or which exceeds our insurance coverage. A successful assertion of one or more large claims against us that results in changes to our insurance policies, including premium increases or the imposition of a large deductible or co-insurance requirement, could also adversely affect our revenues and operating results.\n\nOur business depends on a strong brand and failing to maintain and enhance our brand would impact our ability to expand our business and may result in a decline in the share price of our equity shares and our ADSs.\n\nWe continue to share the “Wipro” brand with Wipro Enterprises (P) Limited, which was formed following the demerger of the Company’s consumer care and lighting, infrastructure engineering and other non-IT business segments. Our brand may be negatively impacted by a number of factors, including, among others, reputational issues and performance failures, some of which may be outside of our control. Further, if we fail to maintain and enhance the quality of our brand, our business and operating results may be materially and adversely affected. Maintaining and enhancing our brand will depend largely on our ability to remain a technology leader and continue to provide high quality, innovative services and solutions to our customers.\n\nDamage to our reputation or our brands may occur from, among other factors, cybersecurity breaches or incidents, compliance failures, or actions of partners or individual employees. The proliferation of social media may increase the likelihood, speed and magnitude of negative publicity. If our brands or reputation are damaged, it could negatively impact our revenues or margins, or our\n\n-20-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nability to attract the most highly qualified employees. Any negative media coverage, including social media, regardless of the accuracy of such reporting, may have an initial adverse impact on our reputation and investor confidence, resulting in a decline in the share price of our equity shares and our ADSs.\n\nOur dependencies on “open source” software programs and platforms could impose limitations on our ability to commercialize our products and services, require us to re-engineer our products and services, or subject our proprietary software to general release.\n\nCertain products and services we offer to our clients incorporate open source software licensed without warranties, indemnification, or other contractual protections regarding infringement claims, security, upgrades or the quality of the code. Although we monitor our use of open source software to avoid subjecting our products to conditions we do not intend, the terms of many open source licenses have not been interpreted by United States or foreign courts, and there is a risk that these licenses could be construed in a way that could impose unanticipated conditions or restrictions on our ability to commercialize our products and services. There can be no assurance that our processes for controlling our use of open source software in our products and services will be effective. If we are held to have breached the terms of an open source software license, we could be required to seek licenses from third parties to continue offering our products on terms that are not economically feasible, to potentially re-engineer or discontinue the sale of our products or to make generally available, in source code form, our proprietary software if we combine it with open source software in a certain manner, any of which could adversely affect our business, operating results, and financial condition. Further, if open source code that we utilize is no longer maintained, developed or enhanced by the relevant community of independent open source software programmers, most of whom we do not employ, we may be unable to develop new technologies, adequately enhance our existing technologies or meet customer requirements for innovation, quality and price.\n\nWe may be unsuccessful in protecting our IP rights due to varying legal regimes and judicial systems. Unauthorized use of our IP may result in development of technology, products or services which compete with our products and services. We may also be subject to third-party claims of IP infringement.\n\nOur IP rights are important to our business. We rely on a combination of patent, copyright and trademark laws, trade secrets, confidentiality procedures and contractual provisions to protect our IP. However, we cannot be certain that the steps we have taken will prevent unauthorized use of our IP. Furthermore, the laws of India do not protect proprietary rights to the same extent as laws in the United States. Therefore, our efforts to protect our IP may not be adequate. Our competitors may independently develop similar technology or duplicate our products or services. Unauthorized parties may infringe upon or misappropriate our products, services or proprietary information.\n\nThe misappropriation or duplication of our IP could disrupt our ongoing business, distract our management and employees, reduce our revenue and increase our expenses. The competitive advantage that we derive from our IP may also be diminished or eliminated. We may need to litigate to enforce our IP rights or to determine the validity and scope of the proprietary rights of others. Any such litigation could be time-consuming and expensive.\n\nAlthough we believe that our IP rights do not infringe on the IP rights of any other party, infringement claims may be asserted against us in the future. Defending against these claims, even if not meritorious, could be expensive and divert our attention and resources from operating our company. If we become liable to third parties for infringing their IP rights, we could be required to pay a substantial damage award and be forced to develop non-infringing technology, obtain a license or cease selling the applications or products that contain the infringing technology. Further, we may be required to provide indemnification to clients for third-party breaches of IP pursuant to our contracts with such parties.\n\nThere can be no assurance that, as our business expands into new areas, we will be able to independently develop the technology necessary to conduct our business or that we can do so without infringing on the IP rights of others.\n\nDisruptions in telecommunications and operations infrastructure could harm our service model, which could result in a reduction of our revenue.\n\nA significant element of our business strategy is to continue to leverage and expand our offshore development centers in Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Pune, Delhi, Mumbai and other cities in India, as well as near-shore development centers outside of India. We believe that the use of a strategically located network of software development centers provides us with cost advantages, the ability to attract highly skilled personnel from various regions of India and the world, the ability to service clients on a regional and global basis and the ability to provide services to our clients 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Part of our service model is to maintain active voice and data communications between our main office in Bengaluru, our clients’ offices, and our software development and support facilities. Although we maintain redundancy facilities and satellite communications links, any significant loss in our ability to transmit voice and data through satellite and telephone communications could result in a disruption in business, thereby hindering our performance or our ability to complete client projects on time. This, in turn, could lead to a reduction of our revenue.\n\n-21-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nThe markets in which we operate are subject to the risks of earthquakes, floods and other natural disasters, the occurrence of which could cause our business to suffer.\n\nSome of the regions that we operate in are prone to earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunamis, flooding and other natural disasters. In the event that any of our business centers are affected by such disasters, we may sustain damage to our operations and properties, suffer significant financial losses and be unable to complete our client engagements in a timely manner, if at all. Further, in the event of a natural disaster, we may also incur costs in redeploying personnel and property. In addition, if any such natural disaster occurs in any of the locations in which our significant clients are located, we face the risk that our clients may incur losses or sustained business interruption which may materially impair their ability to continue their purchase of our products or services. If our clients are required to make significant investments on climate friendly solutions, our clients may incur higher compliance costs, which may adversely impact their IT spending.\n\nExtreme weather events due to climate change can lead to business disruptions. Such events may also increase the risk of epidemics or the spread of infectious diseases, which could further disrupt our operations and workforce availability. There may be direct climate change impacts arising from (1) physical damage to our buildings, equipment and other physical assets, (2) infrastructure disruptions, such as to the transportation network and utilities in the cities where we operate, which may severely hamper business continuity and (3) impact on employee morale and productivity due to the direct and indirect effects of extreme weather events. Extreme weather events may cause intense flooding or water shortages in cities where we operate, high local temperatures due to the occurrence of urban heat islands, increase in food and commodity prices and increase in vector-borne diseases such as cholera or malaria. We operate in major urban areas, and operating risks include disruption of power and water supply due to extreme weather events, which may negatively affect business continuity.\n\nIt may be difficult for you to enforce any judgment obtained in the United States against us, our directors or executive officers or our affiliates.\n\nWe are incorporated under the laws of India and many of our directors and executive officers reside outside the United States. A substantial portion of our assets and the assets of many of these persons are also located outside the United States. As a result, you may be unable to effect service of process upon us outside of India or upon such persons outside their jurisdiction of residence. In addition, you may be unable to enforce against us in courts outside of India, or against these persons outside the jurisdiction of their residence, judgments obtained in courts of the United States, including judgments predicated solely upon the federal securities laws of the United States.\n\nWe have been advised by our Indian counsel that the United States and India do not currently have a treaty providing for reciprocal recognition and enforcement of judgments, other than arbitration awards, in civil and commercial matters. Therefore, a final judgment for the payment of money rendered by any federal or state court in the United States on civil liability, whether or not predicated solely upon the federal securities laws of the United States, would not be enforceable in India. However, the party in whose favor such final judgment is rendered may bring a new suit in a competent court in India based on a final judgment that has been obtained in the United States. The suit must be brought in India within three years from the date of the judgment in the same manner as any other suit filed to enforce a civil liability in India. It is possible that a court in India may not award damages on the same basis as a foreign court if an action is brought in India. Furthermore, it is unlikely that an Indian court would enforce a foreign judgment if it viewed the amount of damages awarded as excessive or inconsistent with Indian practice. A party seeking to enforce a foreign judgment in India is required to obtain approval from the RBI under the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999, to execute such a judgment or to repatriate any amount recovered.\n\nOur stock price continues to be volatile.\n\nOur stock price is affected by factors outside our control. A share buyback program could also affect the price of our stock and increase volatility. Such volatility could negatively impact the perceived value and stability of our equity shares and ADSs. Further, the Indian stock exchanges have, in the past, experienced substantial fluctuations in the prices of their listed securities. The Indian stock exchanges, on which our equity shares are listed, including the BSE Limited (“BSE”) and the National Stock Exchange of India Limited (“NSE”), have experienced problems that, if they continue or reoccur, could affect the market price and liquidity of the securities of Indian companies, including our equity shares and ADSs. These problems in the past included temporary exchange closures, broker defaults, settlement delays and strikes by brokers. In addition, the governing bodies of the Indian stock exchanges have, from time to time, imposed restrictions on trading in certain securities, limitations on price movements and margin requirements. Furthermore, disputes have occurred from time to time between listed companies and stock exchanges and other regulatory bodies, which in some cases may have had a negative effect on market sentiment.\n\n-22-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nAny adverse revisions to India’s debt rating or failure to maintain our credit rating and ability to manage working capital, refinance and raise additional capital for future needs could adversely affect our liquidity, capital position, borrowing costs and access to capital markets.\n\nAny adverse revisions to India’s credit ratings for domestic and international debt or our credit rating by domestic or international rating agencies could adversely impact our ability to raise additional financing, as well as the interest rates and other commercial terms at which such additional financing is available. This could have a material adverse effect on our access to debt market, results of operations and financial condition.\n\nOur liquidity is a function of our ability to successfully generate cash flows from a combination of efficient operations and continuing operating improvements and access to capital markets. Our operations are subject to a variety of tax, foreign exchange and regulatory capital requirements in different jurisdictions that have the effect of limiting, delaying or increasing the cost of moving cash between jurisdictions or using our cash for certain purposes. An increase in our borrowing costs, limitations on our ability to access the global capital and credit markets or a reduction in our liquidity can adversely affect our financial condition and results of operations.\n\nOur total liquidity depends in part on the availability of funds under the revolving credit facility and our other financing agreements. The failure of any lender’s ability to fund future draws on our revolving credit facility or our other financing arrangements could reduce the amount of cash we have available for operations and additional capital for future needs.\n\nThere can be no assurance that our business, results of operations and financial condition will not be adversely affected by our incurrence of indebtedness. Our ability to pay interest and repay the principal for our indebtedness is dependent upon our ability to manage our operations and generate sufficient cash flows to service such debt. In addition, the agreements that govern the terms of our indebtedness may contain a number of restrictive covenants imposing significant operating and financial restrictions. In the event that we fail in the future to make any required payment under the agreements governing our indebtedness or if we fail to comply with the financial and operating covenants contained in those agreements, we would be in default with respect to that indebtedness and the lenders could declare such indebtedness to be immediately due and payable, which could have an impact on our results of operations. There can be no assurance that we will be able to manage any of these risks successfully.\n\nThe value of our unsecured notes due in 2026 may fluctuate.\n\nDuring the year ended March 31, 2022, we issued U.S.$ 750 million in USD-denominated, senior unsecured notes due in 2026 (the “Notes”) through Wipro IT Services LLC, a wholly owned step-down subsidiary of the Company. The Notes bear interest at a rate of 1.50% per annum and will mature on June 23, 2026. The value of the Notes fluctuates based on many factors, including the methods employed for calculating principal and interest, the maturity of the Notes, the aggregate principal amount of Notes outstanding, the redemption features for the Notes, the level, direction and volatility of interest rates, changes in exchange rates, exchange controls, governmental and stock exchange regulations and other factors over which we have little or no control.\n\nRisks Related to Legislation and Regulatory Compliance\n\nOur global operations expose us to numerous and sometimes conflicting legal and regulatory requirements. Violation of these regulations could harm our business.\n\nSince we provide services to clients throughout the world, we are subject to numerous, and sometimes conflicting, legal requirements on matters as diverse as import/export controls, content requirements, trade restrictions, tariffs, taxation, sanctions, government affairs, anti-corruption, anti-bribery, anti-money-laundering, anti-trust, whistle blowing, internal and disclosure control obligations, securities regulation, including ESG initiatives, data protection and privacy, labor relations, wage-and-hour standards, human rights and certain regulatory requirements that are specific to our clients’ industries or certain regulated services we provide. Non-compliance with these regulations in the conduct of our business could result in fines, penalties, regulatory action, criminal sanctions against us or our officers, disgorgement of profits, prohibitions on doing business and adverse impact to our reputation. Gaps in compliance with these regulations in connection with the performance of our obligations to our clients could also result in exposure to monetary damages, fines and/or criminal prosecution, unfavorable publicity, restrictions on our ability to process information and allegations by our clients that we have not performed our contractual obligations. Many countries also seek to regulate the actions that companies take outside of their respective jurisdictions, subjecting us to multiple and sometimes competing legal frameworks in addition to our home country rules. Due to the varying degree of development of the legal systems of the countries in which we operate, local laws might be insufficient to defend us and preserve our rights. We could also be subjected to risks to our reputation and regulatory action on account of any unethical acts by any of our employees, partners or other related individuals.\n\nSome of our clients may operate in highly regulated sectors and/or high-risk geographies. Sanctions may be enforced on them or their key managerial personnel either before they become our clients or during the course of our work with them. Our vendors may also become subject to sanctions. While we take reasonable precautions to determine if a potential client or vendor is sanctioned, our ability to screen and ensure we do not enter into contract with any such parties depends on the data available in the public domain or\n\n-23-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nthird-party databases on sanctioned entities or personnel. If a client, vendor, or other business partner is subject to sanctions during the course of our work with them, such transactions may expose us to consequential sanctions, administrative action, civil and/or criminal liability, reputational harm, and or loss of any government contracts or engagements.\n\nWe are subject to risks relating to compliance with a variety of national and local laws including multiple tax regimes, labor laws, and employee health, safety, wages and benefits laws. We may, from time to time, be subject to litigation or administrative actions resulting from claims against us by current or former employees individually or as part of class actions, including claims of wrongful terminations, discrimination, misclassification or other violations of labor law or other alleged conduct. We may also, from time to time, be subject to litigation resulting from claims against us by third parties, including claims of breach of non-compete and confidentiality provisions of our employees’ former employment agreements with such third parties or claims of breach by us of their IP rights. Our failure to comply with applicable regulatory requirements could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition.\n\nAlso, regulation and monitoring of the Indian securities markets and the activities of investors, brokers and other participants may differ as compared to that of the United States. The Securities and Exchange Board of India (“SEBI”) has prescribed regulations and guidelines in relation to corporate governance, disclosure requirements, insider dealing and other matters relevant to the Indian securities market. There may, however, be less publicly available information about Indian companies than is regularly made available by public companies in the United States.\n\nFailure to meet ESG standards or achieve our ESG goals could adversely affect our business or damage our reputation.\n\nThere is increased focus on companies’ ESG policies and initiatives, which include addressing risks arising out of climate change, water stress, environmental and community management practices, employee policies, cybersecurity and data privacy, anti-bribery and anti-corruption practices and compliance with relevant laws and regulations. In a market with heightened awareness of climate change, aligning our business with the evolving trends is an important factor affecting the success of the Company. As a member of the global IT/digital supply chain, we are subject to strategic risks if our ESG goals on climate action are not aligned to the Paris Agreement on climate change Our ability to meet our sustainability ambitions is also subject to external factors outside of our control including the ability and willingness of our suppliers to reduce emissions and the advancement of new emission reducing technologies.\n\nWe are subject to, and expect to become increasingly subject to, laws and regulations relating to ESG, including the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (“CSRD”) and California's climate change disclosure requirements. As these new laws, regulations and similar initiatives and programs continue to be adopted and implemented, we will be required to comply or potentially face market access limitations, enforcement actions, civil suits or sanctions, including fines. If new laws or regulations are more stringent than current legal or regulatory requirements, we may experience increased compliance burdens and costs to meet such obligations. If we fail to comply with new laws, regulations, or reporting requirements, our reputation and business could be adversely impacted.\n\nOur ability to achieve our ESG goals, including our 2040 net‑zero greenhouse gas emissions target, is subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, many of which are outside of our control. Implementing our ESG strategy requires a strong governance framework including responsible practices and commitment on business ethics, compliance, quality, transparency and anti-corruption. Any failure in governance, performance management or ESG strategy execution could lead to us being unable to meet our ESG goals, and any failure to achieve our commitments to various ESG initiatives, including our goals for sustainability and inclusion and diversity, could harm our reputation and adversely affect our client relationships, access to capital and long-term financial stability, or our ability to recruit and retain high quality talent efforts.\n\nAt the same time, an increasing number of stakeholders, regulators and lawmakers have expressed or pursued contrary views, legislation and investment expectations with respect to ESG ratings and goals, including the enactment or proposal of “anti-ESG” legislation, regulation or policies, which may expose us to additional legal, financial or reputational risks based upon our ESG goals and disclosures.\n\nChanges in corporate income tax rates and removal of Special Economic Zones (“SEZs”) and other benefits in India may impact our effective tax rate.\n\nCurrently, we benefit from tax incentives under Indian tax laws. We qualify for a deduction from taxable income on profits attributable to our status as a developer of SEZs or from operation of units located in SEZs. The tax deduction for SEZ developers is available for any 10 consecutive years out of 15 years, commencing from the year in which the SEZ is notified. The tax deduction for a unit in an SEZ is equal to 100% of profits from the export of services for the first five years after the commencement of operations in the SEZ, and thereafter is equal to 50% of profits from the export of services for a subsequent period of ten years, subject to meeting specified re-investment conditions and earmarking of specified reserves in the last five years. This tax deduction will terminate if our operations are no longer located in an SEZ, fail to comply with rules required for an SEZ or fail to meet certain conditions prescribed under the Income-tax Act, 1961 or the Income-tax Act, 2025 (collectively, “Income-tax Act”) of India. While the Income-tax Act, 2025\n\n-24-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nhas replaced the Income-tax Act, 1961 with effect from April 1, 2026, the change is largely in the nature of restructuring, design, and simplification of language, and the substantive provisions governing corporate taxation, including SEZ-related incentives and profit-linked deductions, remain substantially aligned with the erstwhile law. Accordingly, the overall framework for taxation continues to remain largely unchanged.\n\nIn 2019, the GoI amended the Income-tax Act by enacting The Taxation Laws (Amendment) Ordinance, 2019, and has provided an option for companies to pay tax at a lower rate of 22% (plus surcharge and cess) by forgoing all the deductions available under Chapter VI-A and other profit-linked deductions under the Income-tax Act. This option, if exercised, is irrevocable. and the corresponding minimum alternate tax (“MAT”) credit will lapse. We have evaluated the option and have decided to continue under the existing regime and not to avail ourselves of the lower tax rate. Effective April 1, 2026, the Income-tax Act is amended to allow utilization of MAT credit under the lower tax rate regime. We will review our position to move to the lower tax regime on a periodic basis.\n\nThe Finance Act (No.2) 2024 has abolished buy-back tax previously payable by companies, effective October 1, 2024 and shifted the incidence of taxation on buy-back consideration to shareholders. With effect from April 1, 2026, capital gains arising on buy-back will be taxed in the hands of shareholders in accordance with the applicable capital gains provisions of the Income-tax Act. See “Taxation - Buyback of Securities” under Item 10 of this Annual Report on Form 20-F for further information.\n\nWe operate in jurisdictions that impose transfer pricing and other tax related regulations on us, and any changes in the regulations or failure to comply could materially and adversely affect our profitability.\n\nWe are required to comply with various transfer pricing regulations in India and other countries. Failure to comply with such regulations may impact our effective tax rates and consequently affect our net margins. Additionally, we operate in several countries and our failure to comply with the local tax regime may result in additional taxes, penalties and enforcement actions from local authorities. In the event that we do not properly comply with transfer pricing and tax-related regulations, our profitability may be adversely affected.\n\nSection 59A of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code imposes a tax equal to the “base erosion minimum amount” on certain “applicable taxpayers.” This may have an impact on payments made to non-U.S. corporations if they do not meet the exemption criteria. Taxation laws are susceptible to frequent changes. Increase in tax rates in any of the major countries that we operate in could materially affect our Effective Tax rates. Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (“OECD”), a global coalition of member countries, further developed a two-pillar plan to reform international taxation and implement a 15% global minimum tax on multinational corporate groups. The plan aims to ensure a fairer distribution of profits among countries by creating a new global system to tax income based on the location of users, and to impose a floor on tax competition through the introduction of a global minimum tax.\n\nA significant number of jurisdictions have moved to implement this framework. EU member states, for example, have agreed to implement the OECD’s global corporate minimum tax rate of 15%. Other countries, such as Australia, Canada, Japan, and South Korea, are also actively implementing the rules.\n\nThe United States, however, has not adopted the Pillar Two framework. Instead, it has enacted its own domestic minimum tax regime, the Corporate Alternative Minimum Tax (“CAMT”), which imposes a 15% minimum tax on the adjusted financial statement income of certain large corporations. Our U.S. operations are subject to U.S. federal income tax and may be subject to the CAMT.\n\nThere are significant differences between the tax base and calculation methodologies of the U.S. CAMT and the Pillar Two Global anti-Base Erosion (“GloBE”) rules. The U.S. CAMT is not expected to be recognized as a Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (“QDMTT”) under the OECD’s Pillar Two framework. As a result, even if we pay taxes in the U.S., the income from our U.S. operations will still be subject to assessment under the Pillar Two rules enacted in other countries. The ongoing implementation of these new and divergent international tax regimes creates significant uncertainty, increases compliance complexity, and could materially and adversely affect our provision for income taxes and our overall tax liability.\n\nIn India, changes in taxation law are announced on an annual basis in February, when the Union Budget is presented. These changes in law may affect the accuracy of our estimated tax obligations, or the obligations of holders of our equity shares and ADSs. Significant judgment is required in determining our worldwide provision for income taxes and other tax liabilities. We are regularly under audit by tax authorities and those authorities may not agree with positions taken by us on our tax returns. Although we believe that our estimates are reasonable, there is no assurance that the final determination of tax audits or tax disputes will not be different from what is reflected in our historical income tax provisions and accruals.\n\n-25-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nOur ability to invest outside India, including acquiring companies organized outside India, depends on the approval of the GoI and/or the RBI. Our failure to obtain approval from the GoI for the acquisition of companies organized outside India may restrict our international growth, which could negatively affect our revenue.\n\nThe Ministry of Finance of the GoI (the “Ministry of Finance”) and/or the RBI must approve our acquisition of any company organized outside of India or grant general or special permission for such acquisition. The RBI permits acquisitions of companies organized outside India by an Indian party without approval, inter alia, in the following circumstances:\n\n•\nif the transaction consideration is paid in cash, up to 400% of the net worth of the acquiring company as per its latest audited financial statement; or\n\n•\nif the acquisition is funded with cash from the acquiring company’s existing foreign currency accounts or with cash proceeds from the issue of American Depositary Receipts (“ADRs”), Global Depositary Receipts, External Commercial Borrowings or Foreign Currency Convertible Bonds.\n\nHowever, any financial commitment exceeding U.S.$ 1 billion or its equivalent in a financial year would require prior approval of the RBI even if the total financial commitment of the Indian party is within 400% of the net worth as per its latest audited financial statements. Further, our investments in foreign operations may be subject to restrictions imposed by the RBI. We cannot assure you that any necessary approval from the RBI or the Ministry of Finance or any other Government agency can be obtained. Our failure to obtain such approvals from the GoI for acquisitions of/investments in companies organized outside India may restrict our international growth, which could negatively affect our revenue.\n\nRisks Related to the ADSs\n\nPolitical, social and economic developments in and affecting India may affect the prices of our equity shares and ADSs.\n\nWe are incorporated in India, and a substantial portion of our assets and our employees are located in India. Consequently, our financial performance and the market price of our ADSs will be affected by political, social and economic developments affecting India, GoI policies such as taxation and foreign investment policies, GoI currency exchange control and changes in exchange rates and interest rates.\n\nSale of our equity shares may adversely affect the prices of our equity shares and ADSs.\n\nSale of substantial amounts of our equity shares in the public market, including sales by insiders, or the perception that such sales may occur, could adversely affect the prevailing market price of our equity shares or our ADSs or our ability to raise capital through an offering of our securities. In the future, we may also sponsor the sale of shares currently held by some of our shareholders, or issue new shares. We can make no prediction as to the timing of any such sales or the effect, if any, that future sales of our equity shares, or the availability of our equity shares for future sale, will have on the market price of our equity shares or ADSs prevailing from time to time.\n\nThe GoI has notified implementation of the Depository Receipts Scheme, 2014, which permits liberalized rules for sponsored and unsponsored secondary market issue of depository receipts up to the sectorial cap of foreign investment as per the prescribed regulations. SEBI introduced a framework for issuance of depository receipts by companies listed or to be listed in India (“DR Framework”), through its circular dated October 10, 2019. The DR Framework, as amended from time to time, sets out requirements for issuance of depository receipts in addition to the requirements under the Companies Act, 2013 (as defined below) and rules thereunder, the Depository Receipts Scheme, 2014 and the foreign exchange regulations. Regulators like the RBI, Ministry of Corporate Affairs (“MCA”), Ministry of Finance and SEBI have also issued guidelines and regulations to operationalize the framework for issuance of depository receipts by listed entities. Further amendments and requirements may also be notified from time to time. Once the regulations are fully operationalized, our shares can be freely convertible into depository receipts, which would impact the share price and available float in the Indian stock exchanges as well as the price and availability of ADSs on the New York Stock Exchange (the “NYSE”).\n\nIndian law imposes foreign investment restrictions that limit a holder’s ability to convert equity shares into ADSs, which may cause our ADSs to trade at a premium or discount to the market price of our equity shares.\n\nUnder certain circumstances, the RBI must approve the sale of equity shares underlying ADSs by a non-resident of India to a resident of India. The RBI has given general permission to effect sales of existing shares or certain other capital instruments of an Indian company by a resident to a non-resident, subject to certain conditions, including the price at which the shares may be sold. Additionally, except under certain limited circumstances, if an investor seeks to convert the Indian Rupee proceeds from a sale of equity shares in India into foreign currency and then repatriate that foreign currency from India, he or she will have to obtain additional approval from the RBI for each transaction. Required approval from the RBI or any other government agency may not be obtained on terms which are favorable to a non-resident investor or may not be obtained at all.\n\n-26-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nPursuant to the provisions of the Companies Act, 2013, where the name of a person is entered in the register of members as a registered owner of shares but such person does not hold the beneficial interest in such shares, both the registered owner and the beneficial owner of such equity shares are required to disclose to the company the nature of their interest, particulars of the person in whose name the shares stand registered in the books of company and certain other details. Investors who exchange ADSs for the underlying equity shares of the company may be subject to the provisions of the Companies Act, 2013 and to the disclosure obligations that may be necessary pursuant to the Deposit Agreement, as amended (the “Deposit Agreement”), by and among the Company, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as depositary (the “Depositary”), and all Holders (as defined in the Deposit Agreement) and Beneficial Owners (as defined in the Deposit Agreement) from time to time party thereto. Any person who fails to comply with beneficial ownership disclosure requirements under the Companies Act, 2013 may be liable for a fine of up to ₹ 50,000 and where failure is a continuing one, with a further fine up to ₹ 1,000 for each day such failure continues, subject to a maximum of ₹ 200,000. Such restrictions on foreign ownership of the underlying equity shares may cause our ADSs to trade at a premium or discount to the equity shares. Such restrictions may change in the future, including under the Depository Receipt Scheme, 2014 and the DR Framework, and may affect the trading value of our ADSs relative to our equity shares.\n\nThe price of our ADSs and the U.S. Dollar value of any dividends we declare may be negatively affected by fluctuations in the U.S. Dollar to Indian Rupee exchange rate.\n\nOur ADSs trade on the NYSE in U.S. Dollars. Since the equity shares underlying the ADSs are listed in India on the BSE and the NSE and trade in Indian Rupees, the value of the ADSs may be affected by exchange rate fluctuations between the U.S. Dollar and the Indian Rupee. In addition, dividends declared, if any, are denominated in Indian Rupees, and therefore the value of the dividends received by the holders of ADSs in U.S. Dollars will be affected by exchange rate fluctuations. If the Indian Rupee depreciates against the U.S. Dollar, the price at which our ADSs trade and the value of the U.S. Dollar equivalent of any dividend will decrease accordingly.\n\nOur ADSs have at times traded at a significant premium to the trading prices of our underlying equity shares on Indian stock exchanges, but may not do so in the future.\n\nIn the past, our ADSs have at certain times traded at a premium to the trading prices of our underlying equity shares on Indian stock exchanges due to the relatively small portion of our market capitalization represented by ADSs, restrictions imposed by Indian law on the conversion of equity shares into ADSs, and the potential preference of some investors to trade securities listed on U.S. exchanges. The completion of any additional secondary ADS offering will increase the number of our outstanding ADSs. Further, the restrictions on the issuance of ADSs imposed by Indian law may be relaxed in the future, including by the Depository Receipts Scheme, 2014 and the DR Framework. Over a period of time, investor preferences may also change. Currently our ADSs do not trade at a premium to the trading prices of our underlying equity shares on Indian stock exchanges. However, in the future, if there is any premium of our ADSs as compared to the trading prices of our underlying equity shares on Indian stock exchanges, that premium may again be reduced or eliminated.\n\nHolders of ADSs are subject to the Securities and Exchange Board of India’s Takeover Code with respect to their acquisitions of ADSs or the underlying equity shares, and this may impose requirements on such holders with respect to disclosure and offers to purchase additional ADSs or equity shares.\n\nThe Securities and Exchange Board of India (Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers) Regulations, 2011 (the “Takeover Code”) is applicable to publicly listed Indian companies such as Wipro and to any person acquiring our equity shares or voting rights in our company, including ADSs.\n\nUnder the Takeover Code, persons who acquire 5% or more of the shares of a company are required, within two working days of such acquisition, to disclose the aggregate shareholding and voting rights in the company to the company and to the stock exchanges on which the shares of the company are listed.\n\nAdditionally, holders of 5% or more of the shares or voting rights of a company who acquire or dispose of shares representing 2% or more of the shares or voting rights of the company must disclose, within two working days of such transaction their revised shareholding to the company and to the stock exchanges on which the shares of the company are listed. This disclosure is required even if the transaction is a sale which results in the holder’s ownership falling below 5%. The Takeover Code may also impose conditions that discourage a potential acquirer, which could prevent an acquisition of our company in a transaction that could be beneficial for our equity holders.\n\n-27-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nAn investor in our ADSs may not be able to exercise preemptive rights for additional shares and may thereby suffer dilution of his or her equity interest in us.\n\nUnder the Indian Companies Act, 2013 (“Companies Act, 2013”), a company incorporated in India must offer its holders of equity shares preemptive rights to subscribe and pay for a proportionate number of shares to maintain their existing ownership percentages prior to the issuance of any new equity shares, unless such preemptive rights have been waived by three-fourths of the shares voting on the resolution to waive such rights. Holders of ADSs may be unable to exercise preemptive rights for the equity shares underlying ADSs unless a registration statement under the Securities Act is effective with respect to such rights or an exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act is available. We are not obligated to prepare and file such a registration statement, and our decision to do so will depend on the costs and potential liabilities associated with any such registration statement, as well as the perceived benefits of enabling the holders of ADSs to exercise their preemptive rights, and any other factors we consider appropriate at the time. No assurance can be given that we would file a registration statement under these circumstances. If we issue any such securities in the future, such securities may be issued to the Depositary, which may sell such securities for the benefit of the holders of the ADSs. There can be no assurance as to the value, if any, the Depositary would receive upon the sale of such securities. To the extent that holders of ADSs are unable to exercise preemptive rights granted in respect of the equity shares represented by their ADSs, their proportional interests in the Company would be diluted.\n\nADS holders may be restricted in their ability to exercise voting and other rights.\n\nAt our request, the Depositary will mail to you any notice of shareholders’ meeting received from us along with information explaining how to instruct the Depositary to exercise the voting rights of the securities represented by ADSs. If the Depositary receives voting instructions from you prior to such shareholders’ meeting, relating to matters that have been forwarded to you, it will endeavor to vote the securities represented by your ADSs in accordance with such voting instructions. However, the ability of the Depositary to carry out voting instructions may be limited by practical and legal limitations and the terms of the securities on deposit. We cannot assure that you will receive voting materials in time to enable you to return voting instructions to the Depositary in a timely manner. Securities for which no voting instructions have been received will not be voted. There may be other communications, notices or offerings that we only make to holders of our equity shares, which will not be forwarded to holders of ADSs. Accordingly, you may not be able to participate in all offerings, transactions or votes that are made available to holders of our equity shares including share buyback programs in which the Company buys back equity shares. Because ADS holders may not directly participate in the share buyback program, a notice of such program must be mailed to all ADS holders in advance of the program in order to give the ADS holders who want to participate, the opportunity to convert their ADSs into equity shares.\n\nWe may be classified as a passive foreign investment company, which could result in adverse U.S. federal income tax consequence to U.S. holders.\n\nBased on the current price of our ADSs and the composition of our income and assets, we do not believe that we are a Passive Foreign Investment Company (“PFIC”) for U.S. federal income tax purposes for our current taxable year ended March 31, 2026. However, a separate determination must be made after the close of each taxable year as to whether we are a PFIC. We cannot assure you that we will not be a PFIC for any future taxable year. If we were treated as a PFIC for any taxable year during which a U.S. holder held an equity share or an ADS, certain adverse U.S. federal income tax consequences could apply to the U.S. holder. See “Taxation-Material United States Federal Tax Consequences-Passive Foreign Investment Company”.\n\nGeneric Risks\n\nIf we fail to or are unable to implement and maintain effective internal controls over financial reporting, the accuracy and timeliness of our financial reporting may be adversely affected.\n\nWe are subject to reporting obligations under U.S. securities laws. The SEC, as required under Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (the “Sarbanes-Oxley Act”), has adopted rules requiring every public company to include a report of management on the effectiveness of such company’s internal control over financial reporting in its annual report. In addition, an independent registered public accounting firm must issue an attestation report on the effectiveness of the company’s internal control over financial reporting.\n\nWe recognize that any controls and procedures, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable assurance of achieving their objectives, and our management necessarily applies its judgment in evaluating the cost-benefit relationship of possible controls and procedures. If we fail to maintain effective internal control over financial reporting in the future, we and our independent registered public accounting firm may not be able to conclude that we have effective internal control over financial reporting at a reasonable assurance level. This could in turn result in the loss of investor confidence in the reliability of our financial statements. Furthermore, we have incurred and anticipate that we will continue to incur considerable costs and use significant management time and other resources in an effort to comply with Section 404 and other requirements of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. If we are not able to continue to meet the requirements of Section 404 in a timely manner or with adequate compliance, we might be subject to sanctions or investigation by the SEC, the NYSE or other regulatory authorities. Any such action could adversely affect the accuracy and timeliness of our financial reporting.\n\n-28-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nChanges in financial reporting standards, management’s use of accounting estimates may affect our operating results and financial position.\n\nTo comply with IFRS, management is required to make various accounting estimates, judgments and assumptions. The facts and circumstances on which management bases these estimates, judgments, assumptions, and management’s judgment of the facts and circumstances, may change from time to time and this may result in significant changes in the estimates, with an impact on our assets or income. Current and future accounting pronouncements and other financial reporting standards may adversely affect the financial information we present. We regularly monitor our compliance with all of the financial reporting standards that are applicable to us and any new pronouncements that are relevant to us. Findings of our monitoring activity or new financial reporting standards may require us to change our internal accounting policies and to alter our operational policy so that it reflects new or amended financial reporting standards. We cannot exclude the possibility that this may have a material impact on our assets, liabilities, income, expenses or cash flows. For a summary of material accounting policies, refer to Note 3 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements section.\n\nCompliance with new and changing corporate governance and public disclosure requirements adds uncertainty to our compliance policies and increases our costs of compliance.\n\nChanging laws, regulations and standards relating to accounting, corporate governance and public disclosure, including the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, new SEC regulations, NYSE rules, Securities and Exchange Board of India (Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements) Regulations, 2015 (“SEBI Listing Regulations”), Securities and Exchange Board of India (Prohibition of Insider Trading) Regulations, 2015 (“Insider Trading Regulations”), the Companies Act, 2013 and the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 are creating uncertainty for companies like ours and adding complexity to our corporate compliance regime. These new or changed laws, regulations and standards may lack specificity and are subject to varying interpretations. Their application in practice may evolve over time as new guidance is provided by regulatory and governing bodies. This could result in continuing uncertainty regarding compliance matters and higher costs of compliance as a result of ongoing revisions to such governance standards.\n\nWe are committed to maintaining high standards of corporate governance and public disclosure, and our efforts to comply with evolving laws, regulations and standards in this regard have resulted in, and are likely to continue to result in, increased general and administrative expenses and significant management time and attention. In addition, the new laws, regulations and standards regarding corporate governance may make it more difficult for us to obtain or maintain directors’ and officers’ liability insurance. Further, our board members, chief executive officer and chief financial officer could face an increased risk of personal liability in connection with the performance of their duties. As a result, we may face difficulties attracting and retaining qualified board members and executive officers, which could harm our business. In certain instances, the compliance requirements under the SEBI Listing Regulations, the Companies Act, 2013, and the rules under the NYSE are more onerous than those under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. For example, our Board of Directors (the “Board”) is required to state that they have established internal financial controls to be followed by the Company and that such internal financial controls are adequate and were operating effectively. Additionally, under the SEBI Listing Regulations, the Chief Executive Officer, the Managing Director or a full time director appointed under the Companies Act, 2013 and the Chief Financial Officer are required to certify to the Board that (i) they accept responsibility for establishing and maintaining internal controls for financial reporting, (ii) that they have evaluated the effectiveness of the internal control systems of the company pertaining to financial reporting, and (iii) they have disclosed to the auditors and the Audit Committee any significant changes in internal control over financial reporting during the year, instances of significant fraud of which they have become aware and the involvement therein, if any, of the management or an employee having a significant role in the company’s internal control system over financial reporting, deficiencies in the design or operation of such internal controls, if any, of which they are aware and the steps they have taken or propose to take to rectify these deficiencies.\n\nFurthermore, with respect to material related party transactions, the Company is required to obtain approval from its non-controlling shareholders if the controlling shareholders are related parties. Obtaining the approval of non-controlling shareholders is not guaranteed and may be time consuming, which could affect the Company’s ability to carry out the decisions of the Board in a timely manner.\n\nIf we fail to comply with new or changed laws or regulations and standards, or unintentionally disclose unpublished price sensitive information, our business and reputation may be harmed.\n\nGlobal pandemics may have a significant adverse impact on our business and results of operations.\n\nGlobal pandemics may cause significant loss of life and result in curtailment of economic activities across the world as local administrations and governments seek to limit spread of the disease, potentially through lockdown policies, restriction on business activities and business shutdowns. This may adversely impact the demand for our offerings, our service delivery and our business in certain sectors, countries and service offerings. The magnitude and duration of the impact of any future pandemic on our business would depend on several uncertain and difficult‑to‑predict factors, including the availability, pace and effectiveness of medical responses such as vaccines or treatments, governmental and regulatory measures affecting our operations or those of our clients, and changes in customer demand, spending priorities or consumption patterns\n\n-29-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)\n\n \n\nFurther, macroeconomic conditions caused by a pandemic may result in financial difficulties for our clients, including limited access to the credit markets, insolvency or bankruptcy. Such conditions could cause clients to delay payment, request modifications of their payment terms, or default on their payment obligations to us, all of which could increase our receivables (including contract assets and unbilled receivables) and negatively impact our liquidity and cash generated from operations.\n\nA pandemic may impact our ability to deliver services to clients, including as a result of disruptions affecting our employees, our facilities or our third‑party service providers, and any volatile regional and global economic conditions stemming from a pandemic could materially adversely impact our business. If we are not able to respond to and manage the impact of such events effectively, our business or the price of our equity shares or ADSs may be adversely impacted.\n\n-30-\n\n[Table of Contents](#toc_page)"}