Kyndryl cuts net losses in Q1 2024

August 14, 2023

Kyndryl, the IT infrastructure services company spun off from IBM in 2021, cut its net losses to $141 million in the first quarter of 2024. This represents a significant improvement from the company’s net loss of $250 million in the same quarter last year.

Kyndryl’s revenue declined 2% year over year to $4.2 billion in the first quarter, but its technology consulting practice grew 20% and accounted for 14% of the company’s revenue. While total revenue declined 2% year over year to $4.2 billion, the company’s technology consulting practice boomed, growing 20% and accounting for 14% of the company’s first-quarter revenue, CFO David Wyshner said

“By delivering and accelerating customer business outcomes that are informed by our extensive operational experience, Kyndryl Consult will support our future revenue growth and margin expansion,” said Chairman and CEO Martin Schroeter.

Kyndryl also raised its fiscal year 2024 adjusted EBITDA margin outlook to approximately 14% and its adjusted pretax income outlook to at least $100 million. Schroeter said that Kyndryl is “off to a strong start in our new fiscal year” and that it is “transforming how we operate.” He added that Kyndryl is “signing new business and renewals with meaningfully higher margins than our pre-spin, legacy contracts.”

The sources for this piece include an article in CIODIVE.

Top Stories

Related Articles

December 31, 2025 Meta is buying Manus, a fast-growing agentic AI startup that already generates subscription revenue, in a deal more...

December 31, 2025 AST SpaceMobile has launched the largest satellite ever deployed in low-Earth orbit, escalating competition with SpaceX’s Starlink more...

December 31, 2025 Microsoft engineer Galen Hunt briefly set off alarm bells across the developer community after declaring an ambition more...

December 31, 2025 Global PC shipments could fall by as much as 9 per cent in 2026 as worsening memory more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn