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India's TCS to take $70 million hit after US Supreme Court rejects appeal

India's TCS to take $70 million hit after US Supreme Court rejects appeal
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India's TCS to take $70 million hit after US Supreme Court rejects appeal June 16 : Tata Consultancy Services will book a one-time exceptional charge of $70 million after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected its appeal in a trade secrets case, bringing its total exposure in the matter to $220 million, the firm said on Monday. Here are some more details: • The U.S. Supreme Court on June 15 let stand a $168 million damages award in favour of DXC Technology. • TCS, which had already set aside $150...

India's TCS to take $70 million hit after US Supreme Court rejects appeal June 16 : Tata Consultancy Services will book a one-time exceptional charge of $70 million after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected its appeal in a trade secrets case, bringing its total exposure in the matter to $220 million, the firm said on Monday. Here are some more details: • The U.S. Supreme Court on June 15 let stand a $168 million damages award in favour of DXC Technology. • TCS, which had already set aside $150 million for the case, said it will book a further $70 million towards damages, interest and legal costs as a one-time exceptional charge in the first quarter of 2027. • The Indian firm's net profit in the fourth quarter stood at 137.18 billion rupees ($1.45 billion). • The case stems from a 2019 lawsuit filed in Dallas federal court by DXC's predecessor, Computer Sciences Corporation, which accused TCS of hiring around 2,200 Transamerica, another insurance company, employees and using their inside access to build a rival life-insurance platform. • A jury in 2023 recommended TCS pay $210 million for willfully stealing trade secrets, but U.S. District Judge Brantley Starr cut that to $168 million, $56 million in compensatory and $112 million in punitive damages, a decision the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld in 2025. • TCS argued to the Supreme Court that DXC should not have won unjust enrichment damages without proving actual losses, and that the punitive award was excessive. DXC said the lower court's ruling needed no further review.($1 = 94.5875 Indian rupees)
India (LOCATION) TCS (ORG) US Supreme Court (ORG) Tata Consultancy Services (ORG) the U.S. Supreme Court (ORG) DXC Technology (ORG) Indian (ORG) Dallas (LOCATION) DXC (ORG) Computer Sciences Corporation (ORG) Transamerica (ORG) U.S. (LOCATION) Brantley Starr (PERSON) the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (ORG) the Supreme Court (ORG)
Originally published by Channel News Asia Read original →