Tata Consultancy Services will book a one-time charge of $70m after the US Supreme Court declined to hear its appeal in a trade-secrets dispute, the Indian IT giant said. The court’s refusal, issued on 15 June, closes the last legal avenue in a case that has run since 2019 and leaves the lower-court judgment standing.
The dispute is with DXC Technology, and it is worth being precise about that, because TCS has fought more than one US trade-secrets case and the two are easily confused.
This one stems from a 2019 lawsuit filed by a DXC predecessor, Computer Sciences Corporation, which accused TCS of using inside access to build a rival life-insurance platform. By declining the appeal, the Supreme Court let a damages award against TCS stand.
The accounting follows from the legal defeat. TCS said total exposure in the case now rises to about $220m, covering damages, interest, and costs.
Having already set aside $150m, it will book the remaining $70m as a one-time exceptional charge in the first quarter of its financial year 2027. The hit is real but bounded; for a company of TCS’s size, it is a quarter’s blemish rather than a structural problem.
What the ruling removes is optionality. A petition to the Supreme Court is the last roll of the dice in the US system, and its denial means there is no further court to ask.
The provisioning TCS had already made suggests the company saw the outcome coming; the additional charge converts a contingent liability into a settled one.
The case is a reminder of the legal exposure that trails the Indian IT-services majors in their largest market. These companies build and run software for American clients at enormous scale, and disputes over who owns what knowledge, where the line sits between expertise carried between jobs and trade secrets taken from one, are an occupational hazard of the business. A nine-figure judgment is the costly end of that risk.
The timing lands as the Indian IT-services sector navigates a softer demand environment and the disruption of AI to its traditional outsourcing model, the same pressure driving a wider wave of tech layoffs across the industry.
A $70m exceptional charge will not move TCS’s overall numbers far, given the company’s scale, but it is the kind of one-off item that draws attention in a quarter when investors are already scrutinising the majors for signs of pressure. The company will book it and move on, but it arrives at a watchful moment.
For TCS, the practical effect is a charge it has largely braced for and a line drawn under a six-year fight. The company has not signalled any further options, because in the US system, after the Supreme Court declines, there are none. The matter, after Monday, is closed.
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