#Stock Market #Opinion Piece

Will Trump’s H-1B Fee Hike Sink Indian IT Stocks?

Trump’s executive order raising the H-1B

U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order on September 19, 2025, raising the fee for filing new H-1B visas to US$100,000 per petition. The move has triggered immediate concern in India’s IT industry, which relies heavily on sending skilled professionals to the U.S. for client servicing, onsite delivery, and margin support. Though the fee applies only to new applications — not renewals or current visa holders — the impact is already visible in investor sentiment, contract pricing, and long-term strategic planning.

This article examines how the fee hike may influence Indian IT stocks, which firms are most exposed, possible offsets, and whether the effect is a short-term shock or a structural shift.

Exposure & Instant Market Response

Heavy U.S. Reliance: About 57% of India’s IT export revenue comes from the U.S., and Indian nationals accounted for 71% of H-1B recipients in the previous year.

Stock Prices React: ADRs (American Depositary Receipts) of major players fell post-announcement — Infosys ~3.4%, Wipro ~2.1%, and Cognizant even more.

Margin Pressure Anticipated: Analysts estimate that companies heavily dependent on new H-1Bs could see margin erosion of 50–100 basis points if they absorb costs or renegotiate contracts.

Not All Firms Are Equal:

  • Large companies such as TCS, Infosys, and Wipro have limited H-1B dependency — only 20–30% of onsite U.S. staff require visas. Their offshore delivery models are also robust.
  • Mid-sized and smaller firms, more reliant on new visas, face greater exposure to increased deployment costs.

Possible Impact on Export Growth & Sector Forecasts

According to Emkay, India’s IT services export growth was projected at ~5% in FY26. With the new H-1B cost, growth may slip below 4%, especially affecting traditional onsite delivery models. Price renegotiations and delayed project deployments could further impact revenues.

Offsetting Strategies & Silver Linings

Lower Dependency Trend Already Underway: Many firms have been reducing reliance on new H-1Bs through offshore delivery, onshore hiring, and global capability centres (GCCs). Large players are better positioned to absorb costs.

Clarifications & Grace Periods: The fee applies only to new petitions post-proclamation, giving companies time to plan and adjust existing contracts.

Offshoring, Nearshoring & GCCs: Increased use of offshore work and GCC expansion (India may have over 2,200 GCCs by 2030) helps reduce the need for onsite presence.

Technology, Automation & AI: Automation and AI adoption continue to reduce dependency on onsite personnel, mitigating long-term margin pressure.

Risks That Might Exacerbate the Issue

  • Clients may resist price hikes, straining margins for firms with less bargaining power.
  • Smaller and mid-sized companies may face delays, cost overruns, and margin compression.
  • If the $100,000 fee extends to renewals or becomes annual, the cost impact could escalate. Pending U.S. legislative changes such as the HIRE Act may add further uncertainty.

Stock Market Sentiment & Investor Behaviour

Analysts expect short-term sell-offs of 3–5%, reflecting H-1B exposure. Existing investors are advised to avoid knee-jerk reactions, while new investors may wait for management commentary.

Expert Opinions

  • G. Chokkalingam, Equinomics Research: “IT stocks may see a knee-jerk reaction of 3–5%, depending on H-1B reliance. Stocks should trade lower temporarily.”
  • Ambareesh Baliga, Independent Analyst: “This gives firms time to adjust manpower strategy. Steep declines (~20%) may offer buying opportunities; minor dips (3–5%) are best avoided.”
  • Pareekh Jain, CEO, Pareekh Consulting: “Near-term margin impact may occur if renewals are affected. Otherwise, firms can manage. Smaller companies may face sharper pressure.”

FAQs

Q1: Is this fee hike annual or one-time?
It is a one-time fee for new H-1B petitions filed post-proclamation. Existing visas and renewals are not affected.

Q2: How much of the Indian IT workforce is impacted?
Only a fraction. Large firms have shifted to offshore delivery or local U.S. hiring. H-1B holders form 20–30% of onsite U.S. staff for them; mid-sized firms may have higher dependency.

Q3: How could this affect IT export growth?
FY26 growth may dip below 4% from an earlier ~5% estimate if onsite models remain critical.

Q4: Which companies are most resilient?
Large firms with strong offshore delivery, automation adoption, or U.S. hiring are better placed. Mid-size firms reliant on fresh H-1Bs are more vulnerable.

Q5: Could policy changes be reversed?
Possibly. Legal challenges, industry lobbying, and government negotiations could modify or delay implementation.

Conclusion

Trump’s H-1B fee hike to $100,000 has spooked Indian IT shares, but the industry is already transforming. Large IT companies with diversified offshore models may contain short-term harm, while smaller, visa-dependent firms face greater risks.

Overall, the fee increase is less a crisis than a catalyst for modernisation. Automation, AI, offshore delivery, GCC expansion, and local U.S. hiring could help firms absorb costs and preserve margins. Investors should anticipate short-term volatility but may benefit from structural industry shifts in the long term.

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