| Buoyed by the success of the ABN Amro deal, top-tier Indian IT companies now hope to win a sizeable pie of the outsourcing contract of another European major, ING Bank. | |
| Indian companies expect ING to float the request for proposals (RFPs) shortly, an industry official said on Monday. | |
| An industry official expects outsourcing contract from ING bank to be "broadly similar to the ABN Amro contract in size and scope". | |
| The request for proposals is yet to be sent out to companies and the whole process may take a full year before the deal is finalised. That is not unusual: the ABN Amro contract took nearly a year to be concluded. | |
| Early this month, ABN Amro said it has inked a five-year global services pact with five IT vendors including three leading Indian companies - Infosys Technologies, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), and Patni Computer Systems. | |
| Total value of the deal is 1.8 billion euros, or roughly Rs 9,800 crore. | |
| An Infosys official said his company's share of the order is valued at 108 million euros. TCS put the value of its share at 200 million euros. | |
| Reportedly TPI, an information technology services advisory firm, is advising seven mega contracts totaling $13 billion, to be concluded over the next two quarters. | |
| Of these contracts, TCS is bidding for two totaling $1.33 billion, Infosys Technologies for four totaling $532 million, Wipro for three worth $250 million, and HCL Technologies for a $100-million deal. | |
| In a note to clients last month, UBS Warburg said offshore vendors are bidding for 25% of global contracts handled by TPI that are likely to close in the near-term. This is significantly better than historical win-rate of offshore vendors, it said. | |
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