TCS Faces $70 Million Charge After Supreme Court Ruling on Trade Secrets Case
TCS's Financial Implications from Legal Dispute
Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), a leading IT services provider, is poised to incur an additional one-time charge of $70 million following the US Supreme Court's decision not to review its appeal in a significant trade secrets case. This ruling escalates the company's total financial liability in the matter to around $220 million. The new provision will be recorded as an exceptional item in the first quarter of the fiscal year 2027, covering damages, interest, and legal costs linked to the ongoing litigation.
The legal proceedings reached a pivotal point on June 15 when the Supreme Court upheld a prior ruling, maintaining a damages award of $168 million in favor of DXC Technology, as reported by Reuters. Previously, TCS had set aside $150 million to manage liabilities from this case. Following the Supreme Court's ruling, the company announced it would allocate an additional $70 million, further impacting its financial standing.
Despite this substantial charge, TCS continues to report profitability, having achieved a net profit of 137.18 billion rupees (approximately $1.45 billion) in the fourth quarter.
Background of the TCS Legal Dispute
The origins of this case date back to a lawsuit initiated in 2019 in a federal court in Dallas by Computer Sciences Corporation, the predecessor of DXC Technology. The lawsuit claimed that TCS recruited around 2,200 employees from Transamerica, an insurance company, and exploited their knowledge and access to create a competing life-insurance technology platform.
This led to a protracted legal battle that traversed various levels of the US judicial system. In 2023, a jury found that TCS had intentionally misappropriated trade secrets and suggested a penalty of $210 million. However, U.S. District Judge Brantley Starr later reduced this to $168 million, which included $56 million in compensatory damages and $112 million in punitive damages. This adjusted award was upheld by the 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals in 2025.
TCS continued to contest the ruling, arguing before the Supreme Court that DXC should not have been awarded unjust enrichment damages without proving actual losses, and claimed that the punitive damages were excessive. Conversely, DXC maintained that the lower courts had appropriately managed the case and that no further review was warranted.