app-store-logo
play-store-logo
February 19, 2026

Infosys Slides 18%, TCS Drops 14%: ₹5–6 Trillion Wiped Out Amid AI Fears and Global Uncertainty

The CSR Journal Magazine

India’s leading IT giants, Infosys Ltd. and Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. (TCS), have experienced significant declines in their share prices over recent weeks amid broader market volatility. In February 2026 alone, Infosys shares fell nearly 16–17% and TCS declined around 14% from recent highs. This sharp downturn has erased substantial market value across the sector, impacting investor portfolios and mutual fund holdings as well.

The continued weakness reflects a prolonged sell-off in the Nifty IT index, which has dropped around 11–15% over consecutive sessions, with major IT stocks hitting multi-month lows.

What’s Driving the Sell-Off?
AI Disruption Fears

A major factor behind the stock slide is growing fear among investors about the potential impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on traditional IT services models. The launch of new enterprise AI tools, particularly those capable of automating routine coding, data analysis, testing and maintenance tasks, has sparked global tech sell-offs and spooked markets towards companies heavily reliant on human-led outsourcing.

Market participants worry that generative AI could shorten deal cycles, reduce demand for labour-intensive services, and compress future revenue growth — leading to a valuation reset in IT stocks.

Global Macro Headwinds

In addition to AI apprehension, weakness in major U.S. technology shares and resilient U.S. economic data (which has tempered expectations of early rate cuts) have dragged sentiment across export-oriented Indian tech companies.

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) have also been net sellers of Indian IT stocks, with their holdings sliding to the lowest levels in four years amid ongoing profit booking.

Sector Impact and Market Reactions

The combined market capitalization of Indian IT stocks has shrunk significantly — with estimates suggesting around ₹5–6 trillion wiped off due to these declines.

While the slump has rattled markets, analysts and industry leaders caution that the sell-off is more of a valuation adjustment than the onset of a structural crisis. They note that AI is unlikely to eliminate demand for enterprise systems overnight; rather, it will change how services are delivered.

Strategic Shifts and Long-Term Outlook

Industry executives and analysts emphasise that IT firms are increasingly pivoting toward AI-centric offerings themselves. For example, Infosys has announced partnerships with AI firms like Anthropic to deploy advanced AI agents for clients, potentially opening up new revenue streams. Similarly, TCS has inked technology collaborations with OpenAI to build AI infrastructure and solutions.

These strategic moves underline an important point: rather than being displaced by AI, Indian IT services companies may be positioning themselves as key integrators of AI technologies for large enterprises, a role that could sustain long-term demand.

Investor Takeaways

For investors, the current decline represents both risk and opportunity. While short-term uncertainty persists, many analysts view the correction as a potential entry point if companies continue to win contracts, expand AI capabilities and adjust business models effectively.

Fundamentally, there’s no clear evidence yet of a deeper structural crisis in the Indian IT sector; the industry appears to be in a phase of transition and recalibration, not collapse.

Long or Short, get news the way you like. No ads. No redirections. Download Newspin and Stay Alert, The CSR Journal Mobile app, for fast, crisp, clean updates!

App Store – https://apps.apple.com/in/app/newspin/id6746449540

Google Play Store – https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.inventifweb.newspin&pcampaignid=web_share

Latest News

Popular Videos