Wipro Limited has signed a definitive agreement to acquire select customer contracts from Alpha Net Consulting LLC and its subsidiaries in a deal worth up to $70.8 million approximately ₹660 crore. The agreement, disclosed through a BSE regulatory filing, was signed on April 14, 2026, through Wipro’s subsidiaries. The transaction does not involve the purchase of Alpha Net as a company but is specifically targeted at a set of client engagements, along with the employees currently delivering those services. The deal is expected to close by June 30, 2026, and notably requires no regulatory approvals.
The announcement landed just ahead of Wipro’s Q4 FY26 earnings release, scheduled for April 16, 2026, and kept the company’s stock in focus. Shares of Wipro gained around 2.4% to ₹207.85 on the NSE in early trade on April 15, the day after the disclosure suggesting market participants read the acquisition positively as a signal of continued inorganic growth intent.
“Wipro To Buy Select Contracts Of California-Based Alpha Net For Rs 660 Crore”~NDTV Profit
Who Is Alpha Net And What Wipro Is Actually Buying:
Alpha Net Group was created in 2001 and is based in Santa Clara, California, the center of Silicon Valley. Despite its low public visibility, the company has established a global delivery footprint, with operations in Singapore, India, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands. Its primary skills include enterprise software development, data engineering, and managed services, all of which are becoming increasingly important as large organizations negotiate AI-driven transformation across their technological stacks.
Wipro is not acquiring the company’s legal structure, assets, or ownership. The transaction includes a specific set of client contracts that Alpha Net currently supports, as well as the workers whose jobs are related to servicing those engagements. This structure is significant in that it is a contract carve-out rather than a full acquisition, which keeps integration complexity to a minimum while providing Wipro with immediate access to established client connections and a specialised delivery team already established in the accounts.
The contracts in question consistently showed revenue growth. According to the BSE filing, the selected customer engagements earned $27.9 million in revenue in 2023, which increased to $34.4 million in 2024 and $37.3 million in 2025. This upward trajectory, a 34% cumulative increase over two years is part of what makes the contracts strategically attractive as a foundation for growth within Wipro’s broader client portfolio.
“China surpasses US as India’s largest trading partner in FY26; trade gap swells to USD 112.16 bn”~Economic Times
A cash component plus a deferred earnout based on future performance benchmarks make up the deal’s payout structure. In order to align incentives on both sides and prevent Wipro from overpaying if revenue projections do not materialize, this performance-contingent element effectively ties a portion of what Alpha Net’s sellers receive to how well the acquired contracts perform after transition under Wipro’s management.
The Strategic Logic: AI Services And Consulting At The Core
Wipro’s rationale for this acquisition is consistent with the company’s bigger negotiating strategy. The Alpha Net contracts are specifically described as enhancing Wipro’s capabilities in AI-powered application services and consulting-led delivery, which is the same language used to describe the company’s $1 billion Olam Group engagement and Mindsprint acquisition, both of which were announced just days earlier in April 2026.
A set of North American client ties and a specialized staff with proven experience in managed services, data engineering, and application development are what the Alpha Net acquisition adds. Access to clients that have already invested in these capabilities is a competitive advantage in a market where businesses are aggressively expanding their investment on AI-led transformation. Wipro inherits contracts where delivery is already in progress, so it doesn’t have to start from scratch in order to gain their trust.
The move also reflects a broader strategic choice that Wipro and its peers in the Indian IT sector have been making: targeted acquisitions of specific capability pockets or client portfolios, rather than large full-company buyouts, as a way to add revenue and skills without the full integration burden.
“Wipro To Acquire Select Customer Contracts Of Alpha Net Consulting For Up To $70.8 Mn – The deal also includes deferred earnout-linked payments tied to performance conditions and is expected to close by June 30, 2026.”~Outlook Business
Coming Alongside The Olam Deal: A Busy Week Of Deals For Wipro
The Alpha Net news comes the same week that Wipro announced its landmark $1 billion, eight-year transformation deal with Olam Group, as well as its $375 million acquisition of Mindsprint, Olam’s IT subsidiary. Taken together, the two transactions – one a large-scale transformation engagement accompanied by a captive IT acquisition, and the other a targeted contract carve-out from a California IT business depict a corporation executing on numerous fronts of its inorganic development plan at the same time.
In Q3 FY26, Wipro had reported a 7% year-on-year decline in consolidated net profit to ₹3,119 crore, even as revenue from operations grew 6% YoY to ₹23,556 crore. Against that backdrop, the flurry of deal activity heading into Q4 results signals that management is actively building the pipeline that will support the next phase of growth and doing so through a mix of large transformational contracts and smaller, high-precision capability acquisitions.
“Wipro, through its subsidiaries, signed a definitive agreement on April 14, 2026 to acquire select customer contracts of Alpha Net Consulting LLC and its subsidiaries for up to $70.8 million in cash. The deal is expected to close by June 30, 2026.”~Wipro




