Wipro fixed June 5, 2026 as the record date for shareholder eligibility in its ₹15,000 crore share buyback programme, formalizing the April 16 board approval into executable mechanics. The Bengaluru-headquartered IT services firm confirmed that promoter and promoter-group members intend to participate, a detail that narrows float availability and raises acceptance ratios for non-promoter holders. Each equity share carries a face value of ₹2, and the company has not yet disclosed the tender price—a figure that will define arbitrage spreads and retail participation depth when the formal offer opens.
The record date announcement completes the second administrative gate in India's three-stage buyback process: board approval in mid-April, record date now set for early June, and final tender offer likely opening before the end of Q2 fiscal 2027. Wipro's ₹15,000 crore commitment represents roughly 4.2% of its current market capitalization at ₹3.58 lakh crore, assuming no material share price movement before settlement. HDFC Securities noted potential retail arbitrage opportunities in research circulated Thursday, though the brokerage stopped short of naming a target acceptance ratio. Promoter participation typically compresses available slots for public shareholders, who receive proportional allocation if the offer is oversubscribed.
This buyback arrives as Wipro navigates a tepid demand cycle in North American financial services and European discretionary spending. The company reported 3.1% sequential constant-currency revenue decline in the March quarter, the sixth contraction in eight quarters. Management attributed the softness to delayed decision cycles in BFSI verticals and slower ramp-ups in large deal conversions. The ₹15,000 crore return represents approximately 18 months of Wipro's trailing free cash flow, a deployment that signals limited near-term M&A appetite and a preference for shareholder liquidity over balance-sheet expansion. Peers Infosys and TCS executed similar capital returns in late 2025, though both opted for interim dividends rather than tender mechanisms.
Allocators should monitor three follow-on events: the formal tender price announcement, expected within 14 days of the record date; the acceptance ratio for non-promoter shareholders, which will emerge within 48 hours of the offer closing; and any shift in Wipro's net cash position post-buyback, particularly as large deal wins from Q4 fiscal 2026 begin converting into revenue in Q2 and Q3 fiscal 2027. The tender price will likely settle between 8-12% above the prevailing market price based on historical Indian IT sector buyback premiums, though that spread compresses if the stock rallies into the record date.
Wipro's promoter group holds approximately 73.9% of outstanding equity as of March 2026. If they tender proportionally, non-promoter shareholders face a 26.1% allocation pool, which oversubscription will further dilute. The company has not disclosed whether it will use the tender route or open-market purchases, though firms of Wipro's scale typically prefer the former for pricing certainty and regulatory simplicity.