Accenture is DOGE’s first corporate casualty as shares dive on warning contracts will be cut
- Shares of Accenture tumbled nearly 8% on Thursday after the consulting firm said that tighter federal spending efforts are starting weigh on its revenues.
- Accenture is among the first of U.S. corporate giants to get hit by the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency.
- “As you know, the new administration has a clear goal to run the federal government more efficiently,” said Accenture CEO Julie Spellman Sweet on an earnings call. “During this process, many new procurement actions have slowed, which is negatively impacting our sales and revenue.”
Shares of Accenture slid Thursday after the consulting firm said tighter federal spending efforts have begun to weigh on its revenues.
Shares tumbled nearly 8% in Thursday trading after Accenture’s chief executive officer said in a fiscal second-quarter earnings call that the company’s Federal Services business has lost contracts with the U.S. government after recent reviews.
“Federal represented approximately 8% of our global revenue and 16% of our Americas revenue in FY 2024. As you know, the new administration has a clear goal to run the federal government more efficiently. During this process, many new procurement actions have slowed, which is negatively impacting our sales and revenue,” chief executive Julie Spellman Sweet said in the Thursday call to several Wall Street analysts.
Accenture is among the first of U.S. corporate giants to get hit by the Trump administration’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency, an effort headed by billionaire Elon Musk to downsize federal agencies and consolidate their office spaces.
Sweet added Accenture’s Federal Services was also affected by guidance from the U.S. General Services Administration to all federal agencies to review their contracts with the top 10 highest paid consulting firms contracting with the U.S. government, and then end contracts that are not considered mission-critical to relevant agencies.
“While we continue to believe our work for federal clients is mission-critical, we anticipate ongoing uncertainty as the government’s priorities evolve and these assessments unfold,” Sweet said.
Sweet added, “We are seeing an elevated level of what was already a significant uncertainty in the global economic and geopolitical environment, marking a shift from our first quarter FY 2025 earnings report in December. At the same time, we believe the fundamentals of our industry remain strong.”
Other consulting companies fell in sympathy. Booz Allen Hamilton shares slid 7.5% on Thursday.
Accenture shares have plunged 22% over the past month, bringing the stock down nearly 15% year to date.