Business | Technology
Wipro eyes acquisitions in Japan
Indian software major seeks to break local companies' stranglehold on government deals.
Tokyo: India's third-largest software services exporter Wipro Ltd said on Tuesday it aimed to tie up with Japanese firms and may consider mergers and acquisitions, highlighting Indian software firms' growing desire to get into the Japanese market.
"We have been very successful at doing acquisitions in the last two years. So we are still open to a similar one in Japan, provided that it will fit our strategic interests," Wipro's chief operating officer A.L. Rao said.
Wipro said it planned to announce an alliance in Japan next month but declined to give details. Japan's software service industry is dominated by firms such as NTT Data Corp and NEC Corp, which have strong ties with the country's banks, the postal system and manufacturers. Foreign firms have found it difficult to win major orders here.
Wipro has been operating in Japan since 1998. It said it expects its revenue from Japan to be around 10 billion yen ($92.6 million) in the year ending in March, accounting for about 3.5 per cent of its total annual revenue. It bought a wireless design unit of Oki Electric Industry Co Ltd in November. Hiroshi Alley, head of Wipro's Japan and China operations, said the company also planned to form alliances with Japanese firms for government projects.
"If you look at any of the projects in Japan today, [such as] the government postal project, you'll find that the Japanese competitors themselves - NEC, NTT Data - will join forces to pull together to complete a project," Alley said. "This is a very key element in dealing with government projects, where we'll never be able to even put our bid in, being an Indian company."
More from Technology
More from Business
Business Editor's choice
-
Do unemployment figures flatter to deceive?
Jobseekers and recruiters give out mixed signals ranging from optimism to downright despair even as official data show recovery
-
Banks can increase their share
Longer opening hours, more locations outside cities and lower charges can help
-
Geepas idea blossomed in Dubai
The journey led from a small shop in Bahrain to a $1.27b company in the UAE


