Also, it seems Finacle, the company's flagship banking product, is in trouble, too.
If the fourth-quarter results of the Bangalore-based company saw a drag, it was due to a dip in the BFSI segment. In fact, it declined 4.6 per cent sequentially.
A closer look at the firm's performance shows that all is not well in the products segment -- a majority of whose share comes from Finacle.
For the fourth quarter ended March 31, 2012, the contribution of products was 4.4 per cent, down from 4.8 per cent in the October-December 2011 quarter.
Also, it was down from 5.4 per cent in the quarter ended March 31, 2011.
The senior management of the company agreed that one of the biggest reasons for business to fall four per cent from the US was the pressure in the BFSI segment.
Finacle partly contributed to it.
"Finacle has seen a significant drop in terms of growth this quarter," notes Ashok Vemuri, head (Americas) and global head of manufacturing and engineering services. "But then it is products business, and it has fluctuations."
Substantiating his view, he points out that in North America, Finacle has a couple of clients that are getting into a steady status.
"But the unit has been growing well in Asia. We have to make inroads into the mature markets as well, but that will be a long-drawn process.
"Mature markets don't buy core banking products that much as emerging markets."
In the third quarter of FY12, the company had won four clients in the CBS implementation segment.
While the company does not give a break-up of the contribution of Finacle to the products segment, analysts point out that it will be a majority contributor.
"The company had stated a couple of quarters ago that retail banking is gaining traction, but that, too, seems to be going south," says an analyst of a leading brokerage firm.
"Moreover, some of the new products that the company introduced -- such as Retail 360 or its mobile applications offering -- have yet to pick up momentum. We expect that there will be some pressure on Finacle."
Though the company says the ramp-downs in the BFSI segment happened only in the last month of the January-March quarter, problems had begun cropping up earlier.
In September 2011, Union Bank of California had cancelled a banking project with Infosys. Add to this, the fact that two of its largest clients in the insurance vertical also have issues.
Core banking on a decline
By the company's own admission, implementation of core banking has been on a decline, especially in the mature markets.
"If you look at the switches that are happening from legacy systems to core banking in large banks, they are more so in international markets," notes B G Srinivas, head (Europe) and global head (financial services and insurance).
"The ones doing these changes in their home market are Tier-II
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