| Mumbai-based leading IT services provider Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) has raised its billing rates by 3-4 per cent for existing clients and by 5 per cent for new clients in the wake of rising wages and the rupee appreciation against the dollar, according to a top official of the company. |
| The announcement comes just a week after another Indian IT giant Infosys said it planned to raise its billing rates by 2-3 per cent for existing clients. The rupee has risen by 7 per cent against the US dollar in the last five months. |
| For TCS, the current quarter has been stable. "We have a healthy hedging strategy. The current quarter has been stable despite the rupee appreciation. We have a healthy pipeline. The deal momentum is strong," N Chandrashekharan, who was elevated as TCS' COO on Thursday, told reporters on the sidelines of the Nasscom Quality Summit on Friday here. |
| He said the company, which earns a significant part of the revenue from the US, was not impacted by the subprime crisis. |
| "We will continue to monitor the fallout of the subprime very closely. Having said that, we don't see any impact," he added. |
| Chandrashekharan pointed out that the company's financial services business was growing. "The financial services business is healthy .... It is on a growth curve," he pointed out. |
| TCS plans to open another development centre by the end of the current financial year in China. The company has development centres in Beijing and Hangzhou. |
| It plans to raise the staff strength in China to 5,000 by 2010 from the existing 1,000. |
| "We are looking for outsourcing deals from domestic Chinese companies and MNCs, which have presence in that country," he said. |


