Wipro bags $1 billion contract from Singapore’s Olam Group, to acquire arm Mindsprint

Bengaluru: Wipro Ltd has bagged a $1 billion, eight-year contract from Singapore-based food processing major Olam Group, marking its first mega deal in nearly six years.

As part of a broader engagement, the country’s fourth-largest information technology (IT) services firm will acquire Mindsprint, Olam’s IT arm, for $375 million in an all-cash deal, it said in a release to the stock exchanges on Monday.

Following the announcement, Wipro’s shares opened 3.6% higher at 198.4 on the BSE in a largely weak market.

The Bengaluru-based IT services company will manage the food processing company’s end‑to‑end IT transformation services. Olam has committed to spending at least $800 million over eight years in modernising its IT systems with an option to spend more than $1 billion in total.

Avendus Capital was the exclusive financial advisor to Olam Group and Mindsprint on this transaction.

Mindsprint ended last year with $136 million in revenue and the acquisition is expected to close by June, subject to regulatory approvals. The company has about 3,200 people and specialises in providing IT services to food and agri-business companies with its proprietary IP-driven solutions.

Starting FY27, Wipro would make $136 million from the Mindsprint acquisition and at least $100 million annually in the following years. Most of Mindsprint’s business comes from parent Olam, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.

This translates to 1.3% of Wipro’s FY25 revenue in the first year and at least 1% for the rest of the seven years. It ended last year with $10.51 billion in revenue, down 2.7% on a yearly basis.

“We will now aim to bid for more deals in the agri-business industry as we have access to Mindsprint’s IP,” said a person with knowledge of the matter on condition of anonymity.

The deal also comes at a time when Wipro is staring at the possibility of a third straight year of revenue decline amid an uncertain macroeconomic environment due to the west asia war.

Wipro reported $7.83 billion in revenue for the first nine months of FY26 and needs 1.86% sequential growth in the January-March period to match last year’s revenue. This would mark its strongest fourth quarter in four years.

In January, the company’s management expected fourth-quarter revenue of $2.64-$2.69 billion, which implies a full-year revenue decline at the lower end of the range.

At least one expert said this deal was similar to those structured in the past, where large IT services companies would acquire smaller firms and then bag big-ticket IT servicing contracts from them.

“This is a classic ‘acquire captive and get contract’ deal and it is reminiscent of the past when such contracts were common. Mindsprint brings deep agri-domain IP including Farmsprint, Procuresprint & Tradesprint platforms to Wipro,” said Sushovon Nayak, lead IT analyst at Anand Rathi Institutional Equities.

Wipro is not new to such deals. In September 2018, the company won its largest IT outsourcing contract, valued at $1.6 billion over 10 years from Alight Solutions LLC, which is the former benefits administration and human-resources outsourcing business of Aon Plc. As part of the deal stitched under chief exceutive Abidali Neemuchwala, Wipro had acquired Alight’s IT arm.

Significantly, its last mega deal was also structured like the current one. In December 2020, Wipro clinched an IT transformation contract with German food wholesaler, Metro AG. This guaranteed Wipro $700 million for the first five years, with an option to extend the deal up to four additional years with potential revenue of up to $1 billion.

Other IT outsourcers have also bagged such deals in the past.

TCS acquired Citigroup Global Services in 2008 for $505 million. It also won an IT outsourcing contract worth $2.5 billion from the financial institution over nine years. In the same year, WNS acquired Aviva’s offshore captive for around $228 million, backed by an IT deal worth $1 billion over eight years.

Wipro’s management said the deal would increase its footprint in the food and agri-business industry.

“Wipro’s strategic engagement with Olam Group is an important step in expanding our farm-to-fork capabilities and scaling the impact of Wipro Intelligence™ across the food and agri-business industry,” said Srini Pallia, chief executive officer of Wipro, as part of the company’s release.

This is the company’s second such acquisition in less than a year. In August last year, the company acquired Harman Digital Transformation Services (DTS), the software services and engineering arm of the Connecticut-based audio product manufacturer, for $375 million.

The Olam deal is also Wipro’s second big-ticket deal in a little more than a year’s time. In March last year, the company won a 10-year contract valued at $650 million, with UK-based insurance company, Phoenix Group.

The deal comes at a time when large IT services companies have picked up pace in bagging mega deals after a lull in the last two fiscal years.

In FY26, Indian IT services companies, including Tata Consultancy Services Ltd, Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp, and Infosys Ltd, collectively won five mega deals. In FY25, Coforge was the lone IT services company to bag a mega deal worth $1.56 billion from Texas-based travel tech firm, Sabre.

Key Takeaways
  • Wipro’s $1 billion contract with Olam signifies a resurgence in securing large IT deals amidst a competitive market.
  • The acquisition of Mindsprint enhances Wipro’s IT service offerings specifically tailored for the food and agri-business sector.
  • The deal reflects a trend of large IT companies acquiring smaller firms to bolster their service capabilities and secure contracts.

Latest

JPMorgan’s Dimon Adds Fresh Twist to Argument for Keeping Teams Small

The bank CEO is echoing comments from executives at companies including Amazon and HSBC.

Air India CEO Campbell Wilson resigns, board begins search for successor

The leadership change had been in motion for some time. The search for a successor reportedly began earlier this year after Wilson indicated he did not wish to

Moody’s retains Baa3 ratings for India but warns prolonged West Asia conflict could hit growth, stoke inflation

On the rupee’s depreciation, Moody’s said while oil prices and global financial conditions have historically been the main drivers of foreign exchange stres

How a blind man made it possible for others with low vision to build Lego sets

How a blind man made it possible for others with low vision to build Lego sets

Here’s what India Inc. is projecting for salary increment, promotions, attrition rates, talent development in 2026

Average increment rates in India are steady at 9% this year, with financial services, manufacturing and pharma leading pay growth, according to an industry repo

Topics

Mona Singh recalls warning excited Gaurav Gera to keep Dhurandhar under wraps: ‘Do you remember you’ve signed NDA?’

Mona Singh advised her friend Gaurav Gera to maintain discretion about his role in Dhurandhar, stressing on the importance of confidentiality in the industry.

BVS Ravi warns ‘beginning of the end’ for Telugu producers due to Dhurandhar: ‘Aditya Dhar made 8-hr film on ₹260 crore’

Rana Naidu writer, BVS Ravi, spoke about Aditya Dhar and Ranveer Singh's Dhurandhar and had high praise for the film. 

Byron Allen net worth: How rich is the ‘Comics Unleashed’ host? Allen Media Group empire in focus

Byron Allen is worth about $1B. He built a vast media empire with Alen Media Group from his stand-up comedy career, through decades of smart business moves.

Who is Byron Allen’s wife, Jennifer Lucas? All on ‘Comics Unleashed’ host’s family, children amid CBS launch

Jennifer Lucas is a California writer and producer married to Byron Allen since 2007; they have three children. 

Byron Allen’s political views: Is he conservative? All about Stephen Colbert replacement

Byron Allen is taking over the late night slot at CBS, as Stephen Colbert's show is coming to an end after the host took repeated shots at Donald Trump.

New Mexico earthquake: Tremors felt in Carlsbad, Roswell, Artesia and Atoka

Moderate quake of M 4.3 recorded by USGS in New Mexico as Carlsbad, Roswell, Artesia and Atoka feel tremors. 

Artemis II kicks off trip around the moon after surpassing Apollo 13’s distance record

Moments after breaking Apollo 13's record, the astronauts asked permission to name two fresh lunar craters already observed.

A rescue call for 45 hours 56 mins: Details on how US F-15E airman’s extraction was carried out inside Iran

The US-Iran conflict has hit Donald Trump's approval ratings and intensified anxiety among Republicans about November's midterm elections.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img