TCS acquires Coastal Cloud for $700 million Biggest purchase after public issue in 2004

Blitz Bureau

NEW DELHI: Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) last week made its largest buyout since going public in 2004, agreeing to acquire technology consulting firm Coastal Cloud for $700 million in cash, reports Bloomberg.
The buyout comes less than three months after India’s largest IT services firm stated it would invest $6.5 billion over six years to build 1 gw of data centre capacity, underscoring a new effort by the firm to explore new business segments.

Last month, US private equity giant TPG agreed to invest $1 billion to acquire a 49 per cent stake in the data centre business.

“This acquisition marks a pivotal milestone in advancing our global Salesforce capabilities and accelerating our AI-led transformation agenda,” said chief operating officer Aarthi Subramanian. “It is another significant step towards realising TCS’s vision of becoming the world’s largest AI-led technology services company.”

TCS expects to close the acquisitions by January 31. The company has enough cash to fund this large acquisition. Last year, it generated over $5.1 billion in free cash flow from operations.

Coastal Cloud ended with $132 million in revenue in 2024, according to a press release. Founded in 2012, it helps firms run their business better by offering solutions and people proficient in Salesforce. The company had 400 employees at the end of September2025.

TCS has bought fewer than half a dozen firms and has always prioritised building technologies. It also rarely hires from outside, and most of its senior leadership have been with the firm for decades.

Until now, its largest acquisition was in 2008 when it bought Citigroup Global Services Ltd for $505 million. TCS’s latest buyout is its second in less than two months, following its October purchase of ListEngage MidCo for $73 million, a US-based digital marketing services firm.

TCS, which ended with $30.2 billion in revenue, has struggled to grow under K. Krithivasan, who took over as CEO on 1 June 2023 after his predecessor Rajesh Gopinathan abruptly resigned in March that year. According to analysts at Motilal Oswal, it runs the risk of reporting a full-year revenue decline, a first in its over two-decade journey since it went public.

Even during the pandemic year of 2020-21, TCS added $143 million in incremental revenue, a 0.7 per cent growth.
TCS’s performance is essential as it is the crown jewel of the Tata Group, accounting for about 84 per cent of parent Tata Sons’ total income in 2024 and 41 per cent of the combined market capitalisation of $365 billion, as on 31 March 2025.

The buyout comes less than three months after India’s largest IT services firm stated it would invest $6.5 billion over six years to build 1 gw of data centre capacity.

Latest News

Pilot Travails: Shortage of skilled manpower takes its first toll

Sukumar SAH India’s aviation sector has always lived on the...

Boat IPO papers show audit flags Draft red herring prospectus mentions financial mismatches, compliance issues in group entities

Blitz Bureau NEW DELHI: Consumer electronics maker Boat’s auditors have...

Toyota fuel cell car to be tested on roads India advances green hydrogen mobility with vehicle pilot

Blitz Bureau NEW DELHI: Union Minister for New & Renewable...

Why food prices have outgrown bumper harvests Between farm and fork, comes the unpredictable climate now

Blitz Bureau NEW DELHI: India’s food inflation story has entered...

Topics

Pilot Travails: Shortage of skilled manpower takes its first toll

Sukumar SAH India’s aviation sector has always lived on the...

No flying high without human capital

Blitz Bureau NEW DELHI: India’s aviation industry can no longer...

Smash India’s aviation tyranny now

In any market mutilated into a duopoly or distorted...
spot_img