A US Recession Will Also Come to India's Tech Hub

India’s tech industry is ruling out a US recession. Or so you would think from Infosys Ltd.’s cheery forecast of 14% to 16% annual revenue growth, slightly better than what the country’s second-biggest exporter of software services was projecting just three months ago.

The Bengaluru-based firm, which reported its June quarter earnings on Sunday, is considered the industry’s weathervane. If it’s optimistic about orders, then there’s reason to believe that the deal pipeline isn’t drying up. US and European firms — from banking, manufacturing and retail to health care and utilities — are still entering offshoring contracts, particularly those that will help them automate processes to cut costs.

Evidence of heightened activity is also visible in last quarter’s 12% year-on-year jump in Bengaluru office rents — three times as steep as Shanghai, Singapore or Sydney, according to Knight Frank. In the world’s code-writing capital, information technology drives more than two-fifths of office-space leasing. If the tenants are paying more for space, they must be upbeat about the future.