Accenture beats quarterly revenue estimate on strong demand for AI services

Dec ⁠18 (Reuters) – Accenture beat Wall Street expectations for ⁠first-quarter revenue on Thursday, buoyed by robust demand for its artificial intelligence-driven ⁠IT services as the company advances its AI strategy to capture greater market ​share.

The company’s aggressive AI push underscores a wider industry ‍trend of enterprises using machine learning tools to help speed up mundane and complex tasks, freeing up resources to focus elsewhere, as investors bet on these ​processes to massively boost growth.

“I am very pleased with our $21 billion in new bookings, including 33 clients with quarterly bookings greater than $100 million,” said CEO ​Julie Sweet.

Accenture partnered with top AI startups Anthropic and OpenAI earlier ⁠this month to train its employees on their models and ‌familiarize with their latest capabilities to upskill workers and stay ahead of competitors.

The ⁠IT consulting company, however, is contending ​with uneven demand from public sector and government clients amid ‌a federal drive to cut spending and refocus funds.

It forecast second-quarter revenue to be between $17.35 billion ‍and $18 billion, the midpoint of which is below analysts’ expectations of $17.78 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Shares of the company were down around 2% in premarket trading.

Accenture reported revenue of $18.74 billion for the first quarter, compared with the estimate of $18.52 billion.

The company earned $3.94 per share on an adjusted basis, while analysts expected $3.74 per ⁠share.

(Reporting by Zaheer Kachwala in ‌Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi ⁠Majumdar)

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