India-based Zensar Technologies reported a 17.48% YoY increase in standalone net sales to ₹622.20 crore for the quarter ending June 2025. However, net profit declined 3.86% to ₹171.80 crore due to rising employee costs and lower other income.


India-based Zensar Technologies posted standalone net sales of ₹622.20 crore for the June 2025 quarter, marking a 17.48% year-on-year growth compared to ₹529.60 crore in June 2024. The growth underscores the company’s continued focus on digital transformation services and client-driven execution across markets.

However, despite this rise in sales, quarterly net profit fell slightly to ₹171.80 crore from ₹178.70 crore a year earlier, representing a 3.86% decline. This dip in profitability is attributed largely to rising employee costs, which increased to ₹412.10 crore during the quarter, up from ₹350.40 crore in the corresponding period last year.

EBITDA stood at ₹224.70 crore, marginally down by 1.62% compared to ₹228.40 crore last year. This reflects a stable operational performance in the face of cost pressures. The earnings per share (EPS) decreased to ₹7.57 from ₹7.88 YoY, signaling a modest contraction in shareholder return during the quarter.

The company recorded ₹95 crore in other income, while interest costs were maintained at a low ₹1.90 crore. Profit before tax remained steady at ₹212.80 crore, nearly flat compared to ₹213.10 crore in the same period last year. The tax outgo rose slightly to ₹41 crore from ₹34.40 crore last year, weighing marginally on the bottom line.

Zensar’s financial resilience continues to be reflected in its consistent top-line expansion, supported by digital-led solutions and IT modernization. Its stock closed at ₹811.30 on July 21, 2025, on NSE, delivering returns of 8.17% over the past six months and 8.38% over the last year — a sign of investor confidence in its long-term strategy.

The company remains focused on cost optimization and service differentiation, which will be key to sustaining margin strength amid increasing input costs and macroeconomic headwinds.


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