
India s top IT stocks, once considered safe long-term bets, are facing one of their toughest tests in years. Shares of Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services India s top IT stocks, once considered safe long-term bets, are facing one of their toughest tests in y... India’s top IT stocks, once considered safe long-term bets, are facing one of their toughest tests in years. Shares of Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services… Shares of Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services have fallen sharply over the last one year, with concerns growing that artificial intelligence could disrupt the traditional business model of Indian software services companies. The pressure intensified after global AI companies such as Anthropic and OpenAI began expanding beyond tools and models into enterprise services. This has raised a serious question for investors: if AI can automate coding, testing, data analysis and business workflows, will companies still need the same number of engineers from traditional IT vendors? For decades, Indian IT giants built their strength on large teams, offshore delivery, cost efficiency and long-term client relationships. But AI is now challenging that model in multiple ways. First, AI can reduce the number of people needed to complete complex technology tasks. Second, it can narrow the premium that Indian IT firms traditionally charged for skilled manpower. Third, it can shrink workflows that once required large teams and long billing cycles. This fear has already hit stock prices. The Nifty IT index has sharply underperformed the broader market in 2026. Infosys and TCS, two of the biggest names in the sector, have lost significant market value as investors reassess future growth. The concern is not just about short-term weakness. The bigger worry is whether the Indian IT sector is entering a low-growth phase where old valuation comfort may no longer apply. Earlier, stocks like Infosys and TCS were seen as classic value stocks whenever they corrected. Strong balance sheets, high cash generation, dividend payouts and trusted managements made them attractive during market falls. But this time, the correction is being driven by a deeper structural fear: whether AI will permanently reduce revenue growth and margins. Some analysts believe the market may be overreacting. According to this view, Indian IT companies will not be wiped out by AI. Instead, they may become key partners for global enterprises that want to adopt AI at scale. Large clients still need integration, cybersecurity, cloud migration, compliance, data engineering and process transformation. These are areas where Indian IT firms have deep experience. Infosys, TCS and others are already investing heavily in AI capabilities, partnerships and automation platforms. If they successfully reposition themselves from manpower-led vendors to AI-led transformation partners, the current correction could eventually look like a buying opportunity. However, the challenge is execution. Investors now want proof that AI services can bring meaningful revenue growth and not merely reduce costs for clients. If customers use AI to cut spending on outsourcing, Indian IT firms may face pressure even if they themselves adopt AI internally. Another issue is client