India's tech sector used to own the stock market.
Two decades ago, five software exporters made up more than a fifth of the Nifty 50. They were the engine. The story. The reason global investors showed up.
That story is now running in reverse.
The combined weight of those five IT companies just slipped below 7.6% - the lowest level in over 20 years. Meanwhile, the Nifty IT Index is down 29% this year while the broader market is down just 9%. That gap tells you everything about where investors think AI is heading.
The AI Problem Hitting Indian Outsourcing
The fear is straightforward. Generative AI can write code, debug it, and automate the kind of back-office work that built India's nearly $283 billion IT services industry. If a machine can do what a junior developer in Bangalore does - but faster and cheaper - the entire outsourcing model starts to crack.
That's the concern driving the selloff. Not a bad quarter. Not a weak forecast. A structural question about whether the 20-year growth play is still a growth play at all.
Investors aren't waiting for an answer. They're rotating out now.
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Where the Money Is Going Instead
Tech is now the fifth-largest sector in the Nifty 50. It trails financials, consumer discretionary, energy, and industrials. That's a complete reshuffling from the early 2000s, when IT was the undisputed heavyweight.
The individual names tell the same story. Infosys has slipped from third-largest stock in the index to eighth in five years. TCS now sits at 13th. These aren't small companies - they're just not the gravitational center anymore.
The passive fund problem is making it worse. Nifty 50-linked index and ETF funds now manage roughly 5 trillion rupees - about $52.8 billion. At current weightings, those funds hold around 350 billion rupees of IT stocks. If the sector still had its old 20%+ share, that number would be closer to 1 trillion rupees. The difference - roughly 650 billion rupees - is money that simply isn't flowing into these names anymore.
What to Watch
The selloff isn't about earnings yet. It's about the story. If any of the big IT firms show that AI is actually helping them - cutting their own costs, making their services more valuable - the narrative flips fast. Until then, the sector that built India's market is watching its influence shrink in real time.
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