Vinodsrinivasan Profile picture
May 17 12 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Everyone is debating whether AI will take jobs.

Wrong question. The right one: where is it showing up first, and how do you tell signal from noise?

Read three pieces this week. The Economist on labour history. Bloomberg on Korea's AI dividend debate. Reuters on India IT.

One signal jumps out.
The Economist's case: no technology in history has produced sustained mass unemployment. Diffusion is slow. Aggregate OECD employment is at record highs. Industrial Revolution wages stagnated because of food prices and the Corn Laws, not because machines stole labour's share.

Solid history. Wrong altitude.
OECD aggregate employment is a lagging indicator. By the time that chart breaks, the political response is already drafted.

The action is one layer down. Sector. Firm. Function. That is where the signal lives now.
TCS FY26 dollar revenue: down 0.5% YoY, down 2.4% in constant currency.

First full-year decline since listing.

This happened while TCS won $12 bn in Q4 deals alone and AI services revenue crossed $1.3 bn annualised.

Big deals, smaller revenue. That gap is the story.
The gap is called AI deflation. Clients pay less per outcome because AI does more of the work.

Productivity gain is real. It is just not flowing to the services exporter. It is flowing to the client.

Same pattern at Wipro: third straight year of revenue decline despite TCV up 14% to $16.4 bn.
The Engels question, restated for 2026: who captures the productivity gain.

In Britain 1790-1840, capital captured it via cost-of-living inflation. Workers stagnated. Today, the early evidence in Indian IT is that clients capture it via lower prices. Neither the exporter nor labour wins.
What about jobs?

Nasscom: IT-BPM employee base is 5.80 million as of FY25, up just 2.2% YoY. FY25 net hiring was 126,000.

Compare to FY21 net hiring of 138,000 on a smaller base. The absolute number is similar. The base has grown 30%. The hiring rate has roughly halved.
But aggregate hiring is the wrong place to look. Watch attrition.

Indian IT attrition runs 15-20% in normal years. A firm with 15% attrition can shrink headcount by a third in two years without firing anyone.

No layoff press release. No backlash trigger. No Economist chart.

Just quiet shrinkage.
This is why I keep saying: aggregate data will mislead for years.

The adjustment in services-led economies runs through three channels in this order:
1. Hiring freezes
2. Attrition-driven shrinkage
3. Contract repricing

Only the fourth channel, mass layoffs, is visible. By then it is late.
For the investor: this changes how to read Indian IT multiples.

TCS at 26x trailing is not a growth stock being temporarily disrupted. It may be a structural transition story. The business model that built it, thousands of engineers, time-and-materials contracts, USD pricing power, is under pressure.
What to actually watch, in order of leading-ness:

Revenue per employee at top-5 Indian IT
Operating margin vs wage bill growth, same firms
GCC headcount additions in Nasscom data
Campus placement salaries at IITs and NITs

If three of these four turn together, you have your signal. Two to three years before any Economist chart shows it.
One blind spot in my own thinking.

India is not patient zero for AI displacement generally. It is patient zero for displacement of outsourced services work. Different thing.

US white-collar work bundled with client relationships, regulation, or physical presence will not follow the same curve. Don't flatten it.

Watch the facts, not the statements.

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More from @vinodsrinivasan

May 16
ASML signed an MoU with Tata Electronics yesterday in The Hague, witnessed by Modi and Dutch PM Jetten.

Indian business TV will call this a “chip revolution.”

Let’s separate the signal from the statements.
The facts:

— MoU, not a purchase order
— Dholera 300mm fab, ₹91,000 cr (~$11B)
— ASML supplies lithography tools + talent training + supply chain + R&D cooperation
— Tata’s tech partner is PSMC Taiwan
— Nodes accessed: 28nm, 40nm, 55nm, 90nm, 110nm

Notice what’s missing from that list.
The missing word: EUV.

Dholera will be a DUV (deep ultraviolet) fab making trailing-node chips. 28nm is the most advanced node on the menu.

For context: TSMC is shipping 3nm. Samsung is on 3nm. Intel 18A is ramping.

India is starting where the world was in 2011-2014.
Read 8 tweets
May 16
The Centre just moved silver bar imports (HS 71069221, 71069229) from "Free" to "Restricted."

Most people will read this as a one-line news headline.

It isn't. It's the second half of a forex defence move that started 3 days ago.

Let me show you what's actually happening 👇
May 13: Import duty on gold and silver hiked from 6% to 15%. Overnight.

May 16: DGFT restricts the last two "Free" HS codes for silver bars. Now needs a licence.

Two moves. Three days apart. Same direction.

This isn't policy housekeeping. This is the government tightening the precious metals tap.
Why?

FY26 silver imports: 7,335 tonnes. Up 42% by volume. Up 150% by value to $12 billion.

Trade deficit FY26: $333 billion.

When silver alone adds $7 billion to your import bill in one year, the rupee feels it.

Watch the facts, not the statements.
Read 8 tweets
May 11
Alphabet briefly passed Nvidia by market cap last week. Most coverage will tell you why this is bullish for Google.

Here is what most coverage will miss.

The AI infrastructure boom is being increasingly financed by a circular loop between four hyperscalers and two AI labs. And it has direct implications for Indian IT.
The shape of the loop. Read it slowly.

Google invests up to 40bn USD in Anthropic. Anthropic commits 200bn USD back to Google Cloud for TPU capacity over five years. Google recognises that as cloud backlog. Google’s market cap rises.

Google’s 40bn dollars create 200bn dollars of contracted revenue.
The Microsoft version. Microsoft’s commercial backlog is 625bn USD. The CFO disclosed in January that 45% of it, roughly 250 to 280bn USD, is tied to OpenAI.

Microsoft has invested in OpenAI. OpenAI commits to Azure. The same dollar circulates.
Read 15 tweets
May 10
A Prime Minister asking citizens to defer foreign travel, postpone gold buying, and restart work-from-home is not an energy conservation message.

It is a current account defence dressed up as patriotism.

Here is what Sunday’s speech is actually telling you.
The physical market backdrop first.

Hormuz traffic is running near 5% of pre-war volumes. 1,550+ vessels and 22,500 mariners are stranded. Project Freedom was launched on 4 May, paused on 6 May. The strait is technically open under new Iranian procedures. It is not actually flowing.
Global oil stockpiles drew down at roughly 4.8 million barrels per day between 1 March and 25 April per Morgan Stanley. That is the fastest depletion on IEA record.

JPMorgan estimates OECD inventories hit operational minimum floors by September if Hormuz does not normalise.
Read 12 tweets
Apr 29
The most powerful banker in America just said something at a polite Norwegian conference that most CEOs will not say out loud.

“There will be some kind of bond crisis.”

Jamie Dimon is not given to drama. That makes the sentence heavier, not lighter.

A thread on what he said, and what it means for India 🧵
Dimon named the ingredients.

Geopolitics. Oil. Government deficits.

His point was not that any single one of them breaks the market. His point is they are all stacking at the same time, and we do not get to choose which combination becomes the trigger.

“They may go away, but they may not.”
The precedent he reached for is recent.

UK gilts, September 2022. Liz Truss announced a mini-budget on a Friday. By the following Wednesday the gilt market had broken down so badly that the Bank of England had to step in as buyer of last resort to stop pension funds from collapsing.

It took a week.
Read 10 tweets
Apr 28
UAE just left OPEC.

After 59 years. Effective May 1.

Third largest producer in the cartel. Walking out in the middle of a Middle East war.

This isn’t an oil price story. It’s a regime change story.
🧵
OPEC was founded in 1960. The UAE joined in 1967.

Qatar left in 2019. Indonesia suspended membership in 2016. Angola left in 2023.

But UAE is different. It’s the third largest producer behind Saudi and Iraq. Capacity above 4 million barrels a day. ADNOC targeting 5 million by 2027.

You don’t replace that with a press release.
The official reason: “national interest” and “production flexibility.”

The real reason has two parts.

One. UAE is held to a 3 mbpd quota while sitting on 4+ mbpd of capacity. It has wanted to pump more for years. Saudi Arabia said no.

Two. UAE asked Gulf partners to back it militarily during Iranian attacks. The response was weak. Anwar Gargash said so publicly on Monday.

The cartel discipline broke before the announcement did.
Read 9 tweets

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