NIFTY IT Falls 25% Amid AI Fears: Is a Demand Cycle Repositioning Underway?
- 21st April 2026
- 02:20 PM
- 3 min read
Summary
The NIFTY IT index has corrected nearly 25% since the start of 2026 despite stable fundamentals. The sell-off reflects market fears around AI disruption rather than weakening business performance.Mumbai | 21 April 2026
The Indian IT sector is going through a significant market correction driven not by earnings weakness but by investor anxiety over AI displacing traditional technology services. The correction, analysts say, reflects a structural misread of where the AI opportunity is headed.
Why Has the NIFTY IT Index Fallen 25%?
The NIFTY IT index has corrected approximately 25% since the start of 2026, despite no material decline in IT companies’ fundamentals.
Enterprise AI adoption remains in early stages globally. According to ISG, only around 30% of AI use cases successfully reach the implementation stage. A large share of pilots fail to move beyond controlled environments due to integration complexity, data quality gaps, and the need to redesign existing business workflows.
This gap between AI ambition and production-grade deployment is what analysts describe as the “AI Death Valley.”
What Is Slowing Enterprise AI Adoption?
Around 80% of organisations are currently experimenting with AI tools through internal pilots or proof-of-concept programmes. However, approximately 60% of evaluated enterprise-grade AI solutions do not yield expected results when tested at scale.
The share of use cases in active production has risen to around 30% in 2025, up from 15-16% in 2024. Average enterprise spending per AI use case has increased to approximately US$1.3 million, reflecting the growing complexity of deploying AI in operational environments.
Why IT Vendors Remain Central to the AI Stack
Vendors are shifting from traditional execution partners to orchestrators who sit between AI model providers and enterprise clients, managing integration, governance, and workflow redesign.
First, enterprises run thousands of legacy systems built over decades, and no AI model provider has the domain depth or client relationships
Second, in regulated industries like banking and healthcare, compliance and data residency expertise built over years remains a genuine moat.
Third, a significant portion of the AI opportunity lies in modernising existing infrastructure, not building from scratch, which is where IT vendors already hold the relationships.
Why Mid-Cap IT Could Outperform Large Caps
As the AI adoption cycle matures, mid-cap IT companies are expected to outperform large-cap peers, mirroring the pattern seen during the earlier cloud and digital transition. Smaller employee bases enable faster reskilling, and leaner operating models allow quicker adoption of new technology stacks.
| Period | Large-Cap Median Revenue Growth | Mid-Cap Median Revenue Growth | IT Services Growth |
| CY15-25 CAGR | 7.3% | 13.9% | 7.1% |
| CY15-20 CAGR | 6.9% | 8.7% | 3.4% |
| CY20-25 CAGR | 6.9% | 19.3% | 11.0% |
Source: Gartner, Company data, PL Capital Research
The post-COVID cycle tells the story clearly. Mid-cap vendors delivered median revenue growth of approximately 19.3% between 2020 and 2025, against approximately 6.9% for large caps, outpacing overall IT services growth of approximately 11%.
Persistent Systems, Coforge, and Mphasis are identified as well-positioned within this shift, given their nimble operating models, focused domain expertise, and agile talent pools.
Outlook
As pilot-to-production conversion rates improve, demand for data engineering, AI integration, model governance, and lifecycle management is expected to create new addressable markets.
For the full sector analysis and company-specific estimates, read the PL Capital Research report here.
Stay updated on Indian equity and commodity markets. Read more market news on PL Capital