From Web2 to Web3: India’s IT Giants Quietly Move Up the Blockchain Stack



Khushi V Rangdhol
Jun 28, 2025 01:12

India’s IT giants—TCS, Infosys, Tech Mahindra, and Wipro—are pivoting to blockchain, launching digital-asset divisions and securing global contracts, marking a shift from Web2 outsourcing to Web3 infrastructure.



From Web2 to Web3: India's IT Giants Quietly Move Up the Blockchain Stack

When most people picture “Indian crypto,” they imagine Bengaluru start-ups or Dubai-registered exchanges. Yet the largest moves into enterprise blockchain this year are coming from the country’s four IT-services behemoths—Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Infosys, Tech Mahindra and Wipro—whose combined revenue already tops US $55 billion. Each firm now runs a dedicated digital-asset division, and the contracts they win—from tokenised-bond pilots in Singapore to CBDC sandboxes in Africa—signal that India’s export engine is pivoting from Web2 outsourcing to Web3 infrastructure.

Why the Tech Majors Care

NASSCOM’s 2024 strategic review shows 58 % of Indian IT-services revenue now comes from “digital and engineering” work, up from 34 % five years ago. Blockchain still accounts for <4 % of that pot, but deal value is growing nearly 40 % year-on-year—outpacing cloud or AI growth rates. Talent is also no longer a bottleneck: India hosts roughly 75 000 blockchain engineers (NASSCOM Web3 Landscape 2023), second only to the United States.

1. TCS Quartz: from core banking to tokenised assets

TCS launched its “Quartz” blockchain framework in 2020, but two 2024 announcements made the product impossible to ignore:

TCS staff say Quartz revenue is “tiny but growing”—and strategically vital because every settlement node or custody vault feeds more consulting hours into the firm’s legacy integration units.

2. Infosys Finacle: CBDC and deposit tokens

Infosys’ banking suite, used by 1,000+ institutions worldwide, quietly added a Finacle Digital Asset Solution in 2022. Recent milestones:

Because Finacle already holds core-banking market share across Africa and the Gulf, every successful CBDC or deposit-token pilot widens the moat.

3. Tech Mahindra: DePIN and carbon markets

Tech Mahindra, known for telecom IT projects, leans on that DNA to chase infrastructure-token work:

Revenue is small, but such proofs unlock cross-selling into 5G private networks and ESG reporting—TechM’s traditional sweet spots.

4. Wipro: wholesale-CBDC rails

Wipro’s blockchain practice felt quiet after its 2019 Corda work, but resurfaced when:

A Wipro vice-president (speaking at Hyperledger Global Forum, April 2025) said 60 % of the project team sits in Bengaluru—proof that the firm’s offshore talent still anchors headline Web3 contracts.

Implications for India’s Export Engine

Roadblocks Still Ahead

Outlook

For years, Indian IT giants watched blockchain from the sidelines while start-ups grabbed headlines. That era is ending. With tokenised bonds, CBDC pilots and DePIN rollouts moving from proof-of-concept to paid production, TCS, Infosys, Tech Mahindra and Wipro are positioning themselves as the global back-office for Web3—just as they once were for Web2. The biggest winners may not be the start-ups minting coins, but the legacy integrators quietly selling the picks and shovels of the next internet.

 

Image source: Shutterstock


Source: https://blockchain.news/news/from-web2-to-web3-indias-it-giants-quietly-move-up-the-blockchain-stack