Competition
Figures converted from INR at historical FX rates — see data/company.json.fx_rates. Ratios, margins, and multiples are unitless and unchanged.
Competitive Bottom Line
eClerx has a real but narrow moat in capital-markets back-office operations, layered on top of a more contested mid-cap BPM body. The evidence: an Everest Group Leader & Star Performer ranking in Capital Markets Operations (Sep-25), a Chartis category leader in Client Lifecycle Management for CIB, eight of the world's ten Tier-1 banks as clients, and a 25.5% operating-EBITDA margin that runs roughly 10 percentage points above generalist BPM peers (Genpact 14.8%, FSL 16.0%, Coforge 18.0%). The moat narrows quickly outside that niche — in customer operations for cable/telecom, in digital-shelf, and in pure-play analytics, eClerx is one of several credible vendors per workflow, and the price-discovery is sharper. The one competitor that matters most over the next 18 months is Capgemini's newly-acquired WNS book (July 2025): a tier-1 integrator now owns the closest historical pure-play KPO peer, sitting on top of the same Tier-1 BFSI clients with a bundled consulting-plus-ops sales motion eClerx structurally cannot match. The question this tab tries to answer is whether eClerx's specialist economics survive that flanking move, plus the parallel pressure from Genpact's agentic-AI build.
The one-sentence framing: eClerx wins workflow-by-workflow in regulated BFSI ops on domain depth and margin, and loses account-by-account in any deal where the buyer wants consulting-plus-tech-plus-ops bundled — Capgemini-WNS and Genpact win those.
The Right Peer Set
The five-company peer set is built to triangulate four different competitive vectors, not to find lookalikes. eClerx has no listed twin: the closest historical comp (WNS Holdings) was acquired by Capgemini in July 2025 and de-listed. Each remaining peer tests a specific question about eClerx's economics.
Enterprise value is N/A for every peer — Screener.in does not publish EV and computing it per peer requires linking each balance sheet (debt minus cash) to live market cap; this is downstream Quant-tab work. Notes on net-debt skew where it matters: FSL carries elevated leverage as an RP-Sanjiv Goenka group entity, Coforge took on borrowings post-Cigniti acquisition, Datamatics shows roughly $24m of borrowings on FY26 balance sheet, while Genpact and LatentView sit net-cash. eClerx itself is net-cash with no meaningful debt, so EV is effectively market cap minus surplus cash (~$45-55m).
The four vectors:
The chart maps the trade-off precisely. LatentView and eClerx own the right half of the picture — the only two peers above 20% operating margin. LatentView is paid 30× for that margin and eClerx 18×. The discount is real but the underlying earnings power is structurally similar; the gap is about perceived growth durability and AI-disruption risk, not about today's economics.
Where The Company Wins
Four concrete advantages, each tied to evidence the reader can verify.
1 — Margin premium that holds up across the peer set. eClerx's FY26 25.5% operating-EBITDA margin is not just above the cluster, it is above every listed BPM peer reachable from the staged data. Genpact, with 12× the revenue, earns 14.8%. FSL, with 2.3× the revenue, earns 16%. The closest size-and-mix peer (Datamatics) earns 19%, even though Datamatics is also categorized as BPM-plus-data. The only peer with comparable margin is LatentView (22%), and LatentView is a much smaller, narrower pure-play. Source: peer income statements in data/competitors/*/income.json plus Screener snapshots.
2 — Dominance in regulated capital-markets workflows. eClerx claims to serve eight of the top-ten global Tier-1 banks (eclerx.com homepage). Everest Group's 2025 Capital Markets Operations PEAK Matrix named eClerx a Leader and Star Performer (Sep-25 press release), citing "specialization and depth" in middle-office and trade operations. Chartis ranks eClerx a category leader in CLM for CIB. The Fayetteville NC FCC Center of Excellence — staffed with transitioning US military personnel for an onshore alternative — is a credentialed asset Genpact and Indian BPM peers do not have. This translates into pricing power on regulated workflows (KYC refresh, financial-crime compliance, trade lifecycle) where buyers care more about defect rates and audit trails than unit cost.
3 — Productized IP that supports outcome-based pricing. Compliance Manager, GenAI360, DocIntel, Market360, FLUiiD4, Merchandiser+, QA360, Roboworx CogniFlows — eight named products spanning KYC workflow, GenAI orchestration, digital-shelf analytics, and creative production. The Q4 FY26 first large agentic-AI win is the early evidence that this IP can attach outcome-priced contracts that decouple revenue from headcount. Genpact has Cora and over 7,000 AI builders, but at $5B revenue Genpact's incremental AI revenue gets diluted; for eClerx at $439m, even modest agentic-AI attach can move the mix. Source: eclerx.com product pages, Q4 FY26 earnings transcript, Genpact 10-K FY2025.
4 — Earnings quality and capital structure. Per the Warren tab, FY26 generated $81m free cash flow with FCF/PAT above 100% for the second consecutive year and OCF/EBITDA at a 5-year high of 75%. The balance sheet carries zero meaningful debt. By contrast, FSL is part of a leveraged group, Coforge took on borrowings for the Cigniti deal, and Datamatics carries roughly $24m of borrowings. eClerx's combination of margin × cash conversion × net-cash means the entire ROCE figure is real returnable cash, not accruals or capex-light optical earnings.
The defendable edge in one sentence: eight of the world's top-ten Tier-1 banks pay eClerx a premium rate for regulated capital-markets ops because the alternative — switching to Genpact or Capgemini-WNS — carries a regulatory-risk cost the bank's operations head will not voluntarily take, and that switching cost compounds the longer eClerx pods stay embedded.
Where Competitors Are Better
Each weakness is paired to a specific competitor and a specific reason.
The single most uncomfortable peer comparison is the growth-velocity gap with Coforge. Coforge has effectively bought growth and is being rewarded with a 36× P/E. eClerx has chosen organic discipline and is priced at half that multiple. Two different strategies are being run live, and the next 18 months will reveal whether Coforge's inorganic stack assembles into durable earnings or unwinds in margin compression — Coforge's FY25 operating margin already softened to 14% before recovering to 18% in FY26, suggesting digestion risk.
The second uncomfortable comparison is agentic AI. Genpact's 10-K reads as if AI is the company's primary growth axis: separately-disclosed Advanced Technology Solutions revenue line, 7,000 builders, Cora platform, agentic operations products. eClerx has the products (Roboworx, GenAI360) and a first agentic-AI win in Q4 FY26, but does not yet disclose AI revenue separately. Until that disclosure exists, an investor cannot quantify whether eClerx is keeping pace.
The growth-velocity question is the single most important counter-thesis variable. Coforge's 36% organic-plus-inorganic growth + LatentView's 25% pure-organic growth set a market expectation that eClerx's 22% growth must be paired with sustained margin > 25% to justify even the current discount. Any slippage on either side breaks the relative-value case.
Threat Map
Five threats ranked by 18-month severity. Industry-wide pressures (wage inflation, FX) are excluded — these are competitor- or substitution-specific.
The heatmap shows the two genuinely dangerous arrows clearly. Capgemini-WNS peaks in the 6-18 month window as the integration closes and Capgemini begins selling the combined book into its consulting accounts. Genpact's agentic-AI threat peaks later because revenue cannibalization takes longer than competitive RFP losses. Together, those two threats define the next 24 months. The FCC NPRM is a binary event whose timing is controlled by Washington, not by competitors — it slots into the same window if finalized.
Moat Watchpoints
Five measurable signals that will move first if the moat is strengthening or weakening. Each is disclosed in eClerx's quarterly investor pack, the transcript, peer filings, or a public regulatory file.
The shortest version: if (i) revenue per employee starts rising materially, (ii) Op margin holds the 24-28% band, and (iii) ACV growth stays at 2× Genpact's organic growth, the moat is holding. If any two of those three break in the same quarter while top-10 concentration rises, the Capgemini-WNS / agentic-AI threats are converting from risk to reality and the multiple discount widens.