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Accenture plc Earnings Call Transcript - Q3 FY 2026

Jun 18, 2026

Operator

Good day, and welcome to Accenture's third quarter fiscal 2026 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero.

After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad, and to withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please note today's event is being recorded.

I'd now like to turn the conference over to Alexia Quadrani, Executive Director and Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Alexia Quadrani

Thank you, operator, and thanks everyone for joining us today on our third quarter 2026 earnings announcement. As the operator just mentioned, I'm Alexia Quadrani, Executive Director, Head of Investor Relations. On today's call, you will hear from Julie Sweet, our Chair and Chief Executive Officer, and Angie Park, our Chief Financial Officer.

We hope you've had an opportunity to review the earnings release, which we issued a short time ago. Let me quickly outline the agenda for today's call. Julie will begin with an overview of our results.

Angie will take you through the financial details, including the income statement and balance sheet, along with some key operational metrics for the third quarter. Julie will then provide a brief update on the market positioning before Angie provides our business outlook for the fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2026. We will take your questions before Julie provides a wrap-up at the end of the call.

We're also pleased to announce that we will host our Investor Day in New York City on October 14th. More details to come. Some of the matters we'll discuss on this call, including our business outlook, are forward-looking and as such, are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties, including, but not limited to, those factors set forth in today's news release and discussed in our annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and other SEC filings.

These risks and uncertainties could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in this call. During our call today, we will reference certain non-GAAP financial measures which we believe provide useful information for investors. We include reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures where appropriate to GAAP in our news release or in the investor relations section of our website at accenture.com.

As always, Accenture assumes no obligation to update the information presented on this conference call. Let me turn the call over to Julie.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Thank you, Alexia, and everyone joining us this morning. Thank you to our more than 798,000 people for your extraordinary work. Before Angie takes you through the detailed numbers, I will give you some color on the quarter and on the progress we're making on our growth strategy.

In Q3, we delivered strong results with broad-based revenue growth across geographic markets, industry groups, and types of work, and once again took significant market share, underscoring the relevance of our services and our strong competitive position. To put our performance in context, we added approximately $1 billion in revenue in Q3 over FY 2025 and $3.4 billion year-to-date over the same period last year. We also delivered strong margin expansion, EPS growth, and free cash flow while continuing to invest in our business and our people.

This quarter, we had 30 clients with quarterly bookings over $100 million, bringing us to 104 of such bookings year-to-date, a 13% increase over the same period last year. This is one of the best indicators of the depth of our client relationships and the scale of the reinvention programs we are helping deliver. I also want to give you context on two factors that impacted our results this quarter.

First, we were impacted by the conflict in the Middle East. We saw a revenue impact of approximately $100 million compared to our expectations, which was all consulting type of work, split evenly between the direct impact on our Middle East business and indirect effects outside of the region. In the last few weeks of the quarter, we saw this indirect impact globally in products and to a lesser degree in resources, mostly in discretionary spend.

Sales in the Middle East were impacted by approximately $400 million and also in EMEA due to longer decision-making. Second, a couple of our large managed services opportunities moved into FY 2027 for company-specific reasons. On acquisitions, because of the exciting OT cybersecurity acquisitions we announced today, which I'll talk about in a moment, we now expect to deploy approximately $9 billion of capital this year based on the anticipated closing dates of the acquisitions.

We are also adding important capabilities in other strategic areas of growth, including our recently announced acquisitions of Alfahealth, a service-led digital health platform in Italy, and Whalar, a leading creator and social agency in the Americas. I am also thrilled to congratulate our approximately 124,000 people who were promoted this fiscal year, a 30% increase over last year, including more than 900 who were promoted to managing director. Our people make the difference in our ability to deliver our results and value to our clients.

All in all, we are pleased with how we're executing in this environment. Let's turn to how we're executing our growth strategy to be the reinvention partner of choice for our clients and the leader in the widespread adoption of AI. I want to provide a few examples of how we're capturing new areas of demand in the age of AI, what we're doing to expand our total addressable market, and the areas where we are shifting to more non-FTE commercial models over time.

We believe that AI will be a tailwind for us and our industry as it scales, because it is a catalyst for reinvention and is creating new opportunities for growth and efficiency for our clients and for us. We are building a stronger foundation every quarter for us to win as AI adoption scales. Let me walk you through some examples.

We are starting to see clients who have more advanced digital cores move to larger AI transformation programs. You can see this demand in several significant AI-focused wins across multiple industries and markets, which we publicly announced with companies like BT Group, Mitsubishi Chemical, NSK, Piraeus, Stellantis, TEPCO, Vodafone, and the Women's Tennis Association. The major theme of all of these programs is that we are moving clients from using AI to running on AI.

We are also seeing more clients move from pilots to production, and all of this is happening even as AI is still in the early innings. This quarter, we saw another 100 clients initiate advanced AI projects with us. We have announced a number of expansions of partnerships with our top 10 ecosystem partners in AI and data, and our revenue growth from these partners continues to outpace our overall growth.

We are also on track to more than double our bookings from our key emerging AI and data partners compared with FY 2025, including Anthropic, Databricks, Gemini, Mistral AI, Nvidia, OpenAI, Palantir, and Snowflake. We are deepening these partnerships around specific areas of opportunity where we can combine their technology with Accenture's industry, functional, and delivery expertise. Now, let's talk about our big move in OT security to create a platform-led growth business with a non-FTE commercial model.

This morning, we announced that we are acquiring a majority stake in Dragos, a leading platform for operational technology or OT, cybersecurity, and all of runZero, a leading vulnerability and exposure assessment firm, and NetRise, a leader in device security. Together, these acquisitions will create a first of its kind OT security platform that lets clients see threats, find vulnerabilities, and fix them before it becomes a crisis. Cyber is a key enabler for AI.

We cannot have an AI revolution without critical infrastructure, and you cannot have those without OT security, which is where today the world is most vulnerable. The urgency is real. AI and geopolitical risk are accelerating the need for cybersecurity adoption for the operational technology that underpins critical infrastructure and industrial operations, such as power grids, pipelines, manufacturing, distribution facilities, and data centers.

Dragos, which is the anchor of our strategy, has strong ecosystem relationships with our top ecosystem partners, including AWS, CrowdStrike, Microsoft, Palo Alto, and ServiceNow, which we will leverage to scale. Our expansion into the OT cyber platform business builds on our strong foundation of cybersecurity services, including OT. We have grown our services organically and inorganically over the last decade from roughly $700 million in FY 2016 to $10 billion in fiscal 2025, a 35% CAGR over the period, four times that of Accenture's over the same period.

This investment more than triples our total addressable market in OT security, which is growing double digit. We are also expanding our total addressable market by going after a new exciting customer segment, the mid-market. We estimate that the mid-market, which we look at as companies with between $300 million and $3 billion of revenue, is a $240 billion addressable market for us, growing high single digits.

That is why we are launching a new business next week called Accenture Edge. This business will embed Accenture's large enterprise expertise and ecosystem relationships in business solutions designed specifically for the mid-market. We see that companies in this segment face many of the same technology, data, AI, cybersecurity, and productivity challenges as large enterprises, but they often need solutions that are faster to deploy, more repeatable, and right-sized for their scale.

This segment is also an important priority for our ecosystem partners, which see strong demand and want to partner with us because we can bring scale, consistency, and delivery quality to a fragmented services market. Accenture Edge will also include seamless integration with Accenture's joint venture with Microsoft, Avanade. Avanade will continue to serve as the provider of Microsoft Platform Services to mid-market clients, bringing deep cloud and security and AI expertise to help companies adopt AI at speed and scale.

Together, these actions show how we are building a strong foundation for us to win in AI, expanding our addressable market across new growth areas and client segments, and evolving towards more non-FTE revenue over time. We believe this positions Accenture well for our next phase of growth. Over to you, Angie.

Angie Park

Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Julie, and thanks to all of you for taking the time to join us on today's call. We are pleased with our third quarter results, with revenue above the midpoint of our guided range with strong profitability and robust free cash flow. We delivered these results while continuing to invest in long-term market leadership and returning significant cash to shareholders.

Based upon these results, we are on track to deliver or exceed all aspects of our guidance provided in September. Let me summarize a few highlights from the quarter. Revenues grew 3% in local currency with growth across geographic markets, industry groups, and types of work.

Excluding the 1% impact from our federal business, revenues grew about 4%. We continue to take significant market share on a rolling four-quarter basis against our basket of our closest global publicly-traded competitors, which is how we calculate market share. Operating margin expanded 20 basis points to 17% compared to Q3 results last year.

This was achieved while making significant investments in our people and our business. EPS grew 9% in the quarter to $3.80 compared to EPS last year. Finally, we delivered free cash flow of $3.6 billion and returned $2.2 billion to shareholders through repurchases and dividends.

Nine months into the fiscal year, we invested $3 billion, primarily in 13 acquisitions. With those high-level comments, let me turn to some of the details, starting with new bookings. New bookings were $19.3 billion for the quarter, a 2% decrease in US dollars and 3% in local currency, with an overall book-to-bill of 1.0.

In Q3, consulting bookings were $10.3 billion with a book-to-bill of 1.1. In managed services, bookings were $9.1 billion with a book-to-bill of 1.0. Turning now to revenues.

Revenues for the quarter were $18.7 billion, a 6% increase in US dollars and 3% in local currency. Consulting revenues for the quarter were $9.3 billion, up 4% in US dollars and 1% in local currency. Managed services revenues were $9.4 billion, up 8% in US dollars and 5% in local currency, driven by mid-single-digit growth in technology managed services, which include application managed services and infrastructure managed services, and high single-digit growth in operations.

Turning to our geographic markets. In the Americas, revenues grew 1% in local currency. Growth was led by software and platforms, high tech and industrials, partially offset by a decline in public service.

Revenue growth was driven by the United States. Excluding the about 1.5% impact from our federal business, Americas grew approximately 3%. In EMEA, we delivered 4% growth in local currency, led by growth in public service and software and platforms.

Revenue growth was driven by the U.K. and Italy, partially offset by a decline in Germany and in the Middle East. In Asia Pacific, revenue grew 8% in local currency, driven by growth in public service, banking and capital markets, and insurance. Revenue growth was driven by Japan, Australia, and Singapore.

Moving down the income statement, gross margin for the quarter was 32.8% compared to 32.9% for the third quarter last year. Sales and marketing expense for the quarter was 9.7% compared with 9.9% for the third quarter last year. General and administrative expense was 6.1% compared to 6.1% for the same quarter last year.

Operating income was $3.2 billion in the third quarter, reflecting a 17% operating margin, a 20 basis point increase from operating margin in Q3 last year. Our effective tax rate for the quarter was 24.2% compared with an effective tax rate of 24% for the third quarter last year. Diluted earnings per share grew 9% to $3.80 compared with diluted EPS of $3.49 in the third quarter last year.

Day services outstanding were 48 days compared to 46 days last quarter and 47 days in the third quarter of last year. Free cash flow for the quarter was $3.6 billion, resulting from cash generated by operating activities of $3.8 billion net of property and equipment additions of $186 million. Our cash balance at May 31st was $10.2 billion compared with $11.5 billion at August 31st.

With regards to our ongoing objective to return cash to shareholders, in the third quarter, we continued to accelerate our share buybacks and repurchased or redeemed 6 million shares for $1.2 billion at an average price of $198.84 per share. As of May 31st, we had approximately $3.2 billion of share repurchase authority remaining. Also, in May, we paid a quarterly cash dividend of $1.63 per share for a total of $1 billion.

This represented a 10% increase over last year. Our board of directors declared a quarterly cash dividend of $1.63 per share to be paid on August 14th, a 10% increase over last year. In year to date, we have returned $8.2 billion in cash to shareholders, which is $1.3 billion more than the same time last year, demonstrating our commitment to shareholder returns.

In closing, we remain focused on executing our business and capturing new opportunities for growth while continuing to invest to strengthen our relevance in the age of AI for long-term market leadership. Now let me turn it back to Julie.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Thank you, Angie. When I look at the breadth of work we signed just this quarter across industries and parts of the enterprise, it is staggering. The reason is that we are truly the only company that can cover, at scale, everything from the AI and technology foundation to reinventing nearly every part of the enterprise.

We bring a track record of delivering results for decades and deep trusted relationships, as seen in the fact that 195 of our top 200 clients have been clients for more than 10 years. We are working with McDonald's, one of the world's most iconic restaurant brands, serving more than 70 million customers every day as we support key elements of their ongoing transformation. Together, we've partnered across the enterprise with a particular focus on finance and people modernization and customer loyalty.

This foundation is helping McDonald's become faster, more innovative, and efficient as they continue to grow and stay competitive. Stay tuned for the next Reinvented with Accenture episode on CNBC in the coming weeks, featuring McDonald's Chairman and CEO, Chris Kempczinski, on how McDonald's is continuing to reinvent for the future. Let's double-click on demand in the quarter.

We saw a few major themes. Clients continued to invest in the foundations needed to scale AI. This includes strengthening their digital core through cloud, data security, and operating model transformation.

A lot of our reinvention work today is helping clients get ready for AI, data remains a critical enabler with at least one out of every two advanced AI projects continuing to lead to a data project. Second, clients continue to look to reinvent faster, leverage our proprietary platforms and expertise, and achieve greater efficiencies and growth, including through managed services across the enterprise. We're seeing the nature of these programs with managed services evolve, with clients asking for more consulting and AI expertise within them.

Exactly the shift we have been positioning for. Bath & Body Works is a great example of our work in managed services. A global leader in personal care and home fragrance, Bath & Body Works is one of America's most iconic retail brands.

They have a strong growth agenda built around their core product lines, brand modernization, and expanded distribution. Delivering on that requires a smarter, more scalable operating model underneath it. We're expanding our partnership to make that possible, consolidating fragmented operations across critical business functions into a unified managed services model with agentic AI embedded throughout and humans in the lead.

The result is automation replacing manual effort, faster speed to market, and significant cost savings and productivity gains that Bath & Body Works can reinvest directly into growth. Another area of strong demand are the AI enablers we've been investing in from capital projects to data centers to LearnVantage to cybersecurity, one of our largest AI enablers. As I mentioned earlier, OT security is one of the hottest areas driven by AI cyber threats and geopolitical risk.

We are seeing that demand in our services business as clients look to protect the physical infrastructure that keeps their operations and communities running. For example, we're helping one of the largest electric utilities in North America secure its electrical grid, protecting power infrastructure that serves more than 10 million people. As utilities modernize and connect more devices across the grid, the cyber threat landscape is expanding rapidly.

Operational technology environments like substations and transmission networks have historically had little visibility into cyber activity, making threats harder to detect and slower to resolve. Building on a decade-long cybersecurity partnership, we are extending our work beyond traditional IT into the physical infrastructure. Sensors will be embedded at substations, connecting them to a centralized security operations center for continuous monitoring, and automation will turn raw data into actionable insights.

The result is a more secure, resilient grid, protecting the homes, hospitals, and businesses that depend on it every day. Finally, clients with more advanced digital cores are starting to take on larger AI programs. Exciting green shoots.

These large-scale AI programs are complex, to make advanced AI work, deep industry and functional knowledge is needed in addition to technology and AI expertise. A great example is BT Group, one of our U.K. clients where our long-standing relationship is expanding into a new AI partnership for BT Business, the division which provides the connectivity backbone for U.K. businesses and public services. BT Business manages networks at massive scale and a threat environment that is evolving faster than traditional operating models can keep up with.

We're embedding AI directly into the core of how they operate, building on their existing network intelligence, customer data, and service management platform. AIOps capabilities with autonomous agents will detect, route, and resolve incidents with self-healing that accelerates how quickly issues are resolved. The result will be fewer disruptions, faster resolution, and a more resilient network, positioning BT Business to lead the next generation of AI-powered managed services to its customers.

As we look at the opportunity to scale AI, we're a partner of choice because we're delivering tangible results. For example, Cox Communications, the largest private broadband company in the U.S., worked with us to drive growth and efficiency across marketing, sales, and service. Together with a leading large language model provider and hyperscaler, we built an AI engine that validates and enriches leads, generates personalized campaign content, and automates brand and legal validations.

In B2B sales and marketing, conversion rates increased and drove net new revenue. Lead accuracy jumped from 13%-97%. Campaign speed to market improved by 55%, and marketing content teams are 40% more productive, with capacity freed to drive further growth.

This is what AI ROI looks like in practice. Not a pilot, but a production-grade commercial engine delivering results at scale. Banco Bradesco, one of Brazil's largest financial institutions, is another great example of delivering tangible ROI from AI.

Competing in the country's biggest lending market, new and used vehicle financing, their ambition was to grow deliberately at scale without sacrificing risk discipline. Two fragmented platforms meant slower decisions, inconsistent experiences, and limited ability to compete at speed in a market where dealers and customers expect instant answers. Together, we built a single unified platform that orchestrates the entire journey from dealer portal and customer origination through government database checks, credit validation, and loan processing.

All of it works seamlessly in real time across many integrations with and for the bank. Bradesco grew its vehicle financing portfolio 7.3% quarter-over-quarter, with the unified platform a key enabler of that performance. With that, over to you, Angie.

Angie Park

Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Julie. Let me turn to our business outlook. Given the macro uncertainty, we expect more of the guided range to be in play for Q4.

For the fourth quarter of fiscal 2026, we expect revenues to be in the range of $17.75 billion to $18.4 billion. This assumes the impact of FX will be approximately negative 0.5% compared to the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025 and reflects an estimated 1%-5% growth in local currency. As it relates to our federal business, we expect to anniversary the headwind and get back to growth in the fourth quarter.

Moving to full fiscal year 2026. Based upon how the rates have been trending over the last few weeks, we assume the impact of FX on our results in US dollars will be positive 2% compared to fiscal 2025. For the full fiscal 2026, we now expect our revenue to be in the range of 3%-4% growth in local currency over fiscal 2025, including an estimated 1% impact from our federal business.

Excluding the impact of federal, our revenue is expected to be an estimated 4%-5%. We continue to expect an inorganic contribution of about 1.5%. With our exciting announcement to expand into the OT security software market that we have just made, assuming those transactions close this fiscal year, we now expect to invest approximately $9 billion in acquisitions this fiscal year, and we continue to have a pipeline of attractive acquisitions for FY 2027.

For adjusted operating margin, we now expect fiscal year 2026 to be 15.8%, a 20 basis point expansion over adjusted fiscal 2025 results. We now expect our annual adjusted effective tax rate to be in the range of 24%-25%. This compares to an adjusted effective tax rate of 23.6% in fiscal 2025.

We now expect our full-year diluted adjusted earnings per share for fiscal 2026 to be in the range of $13.78-$13.90, or 7%-8% growth over adjusted fiscal 2025 results. For the full fiscal 2026, we continue to expect operating cash flow to be in the range of $11.5 billion to $12.2 billion, property and equipment additions to be approximately $700 million, and free cash flow to be in the range of $10.8 billion to $11.5 billion. Our free cash flow guidance reflects a very strong free cash flow to net income ratio of 1.3.

We now expect to return at least $9.5 billion through dividends and share repurchases as we continue to return a substantial portion of cash to our shareholders. Finally, as part of our routine review of our capital structure, including taking into account our elevated M&A outlook for FY 2026, we expect to access the long-term debt market to increase our liquidity for M&A spend and general corporate purposes as we look to optimize our capital structure and reduce our cost of capital. In connection with that, we expect to maintain a strong investment-grade credit rating with a low net leverage ratio.

With that, let's open it up so that we can take your questions. Alexia?

Alexia Quadrani

Thanks, Angie. I would ask that each of you keeps one question and a follow-up to allow as many participants as possible to ask a question. Operator, will you provide instructions for those on the call, please?

Operator

Yes, ma'am. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speakerphone, we ask that you please pick up your handset before pressing the keys.

If at any time your question has been addressed and you'd like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. Today's first question comes from Bryan Keane at Citi. Please go ahead.

Bryan Keane

Hi, guys. Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions.

It looks like the Middle East conflict should be alleviating given the recent agreement with Iran and the U.S. How does that impact, you think, the Middle East weakness? You saw the $100 million in weakness you saw this quarter as we get into the fourth quarter because you guys are still highlighting some macro uncertainty in the guide.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Thanks, Bryan. Because the indirect impact really started in the last few weeks and mostly in discretionary spend, we do think that there will be more impact in Q4, which is why we're saying that more of the range is in play. In these areas, it's not clear how fast things will change, particularly because some of the industries are dealing with longer-term issues.

Think about automotive, where we have a large presence. They were already challenged, and now with the higher gas prices, that's added to it. It's difficult, of course, to predict and even exactly how it's all going to play out.

Because we started seeing it really in the last few weeks on the indirect impact, we do think that more of the range is in play. The impact in the Middle East, again, it just depends on how quickly people start to focus on growing. That's how we're seeing Q4.

Bryan Keane

Got it. The push-out on managed services, on our calculation, was a little over $2 billion lower than we expected. Does that bump Q4 totals?

Do you get that? Has that already been signed? Does that bump Q4 totals by an additional $2 billion or so?

Just trying to quantify the impact there.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Sure. No. What we saw was a couple of deals pushing out to FY 2027, but that's not into Q4.

We did see some slippage overall in EMEA, that we're going to try to make up for in Q4. The bigger deals, and remember, managed services, when you're doing a deal at, say, $300 million, $400 million, $500 million, it can have a big swing, right? We've seen a couple of the big lumpy, bigger ones move out for company-specific reasons to FY 2027.

I wouldn't think about it as massively increasing Q4 at all because it's pushed farther out.

Bryan Keane

Got it. Thanks for taking the questions.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Tien-tsin Huang with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

Tien-Tsin Huang

Hi. Thanks a lot. Julie, I was hoping, can you give us a little bit more on the thesis of acquiring these three OT security assets?

I understand they're great growth spaces within security, there's a lot of layers to this. Sounds like you're adding more non-FTE content. Is there above-average risk here because you're stitching together the three assets, and it sounds like there's going to be some initial dilution.

I just want to better understand the risk there. Finally, just why prioritize security as an enabler for AI versus other areas to win in AI? We obviously trust what you guys have done in the past.

We're just trying to better understand, because this seems more strategic than about adding revenue, per se. Thanks.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Thanks, Tien-tsin. Exactly. This is about long-term growth and really a massive market when you start to think about how it's not about even assets.

Everything's going to the physical world, right? Physical AI is coming. Everything's going to be connected.

You can't have an AI revolution unless you have critical infrastructure and unless you secure when you start moving into physical AI, and you can't have that without OT security. 95% of spend in the past has been about IT security, and OT security is a much bigger market and critical need. We're starting from a $10 billion cybersecurity services business that we've built over the last 10 years organically and inorganically, a 35% CAGR, and we've been in OT security all along. One of the things that we do really well is to understand where the technology is going to create demand in our clients.

In terms of the platform itself, Dragos has an excellent platform. The addition of NetRise and runZero is just enhancing an already strong platform. What companies today do is they have a bunch of fragments.

They have to contract here, and they have to contract here, and they have to stitch it together. So day one, just the first thing is it is one contract. Then we will enhance the platform, which Dragos has a ton of experience because they have been building that platform.

So we do not see risk at all in terms of stitching it. Day one, we are already making companies a lot happier because they can have one buy, not three. We view a really a massive opportunity because it is meeting such a critical need, and it is simple.

You cannot succeed in AI unless you have got security.

Tien-Tsin Huang

Got it. It is interesting. Trying to learn more about it.

That is why I wanted to ask. Just as my follow-up maybe for Angie, just thinking if the entire range is in play, to your answer to Bryan's question there, just trying to think about the bottom line visibility there. What are you doing to protect the bottom line to the extent that you see maybe if we start to lean more towards the bottom end of the range, for example, what are you doing to protect the bottom line?

Is there flexibility there, given all the investments that is going on? Thank you.

Angie Park

Chief Financial Officer

I think, for us, because of the uncertainty that we experienced, particularly in the last few weeks of the quarter, we did want to make sure that you understood that more of the range is in play. Tien-Tsin, I think one of the things that you are trying to get underneath is really around our exit rate and what that looks like going forward, right? I know that that is top of mind for you guys because you used Q4 as that basis, I want to make sure that I get a few points out for you to consider because this is what we are thinking about as well.

If you think about the acquisitions that we have announced today, and the expected closing, we do expect to enter FY 2027 slightly below 2% of inorganic growth. Secondly is our AFF headwind will sunset this quarter. We expect that it will return to growth this quarter.

The third is related to the managed services opportunities that Julie mentioned and when they close in 2027. Then, of course, this conflict that Julie already mentioned in discussing with Bryan, that's a variable. We'll see how that evolves.

At the same time, we are executing in new areas, including demand in AI and expanding our TAM. These are the elements as we think about in terms of how we look forward into 2027. Importantly, within our range for revenue of 1%-5% for the quarter margin in EPS, we expect strong overall margin in EPS expansion for the year.

Tien-Tsin Huang

That's great. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question today comes from Jason Kupferberg with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.

Jason Kupferberg

Good morning, guys. Thanks. The consulting bookings growth was actually pretty strong in the quarter.

Even on an LTM basis, it's pretty solid. The constant currency revenue growth in consulting has obviously been a bit more tepid. I'm curious what may be causing a bit of that disconnect.

Are there issues with backlog conversion? Has the mix of renewals increased other factors? Obviously, you talked about the Middle East, but not sure whether that would necessarily be affecting the revenues more than the bookings in this quarter specifically.

Again, if we look at it on an LTM basis, it just seems like there's a little bit of a disconnect there. Would love any thoughts.

Angie Park

Chief Financial Officer

Hi, Jason. Good morning. Let me just give you a little bit of context here.

In terms of consulting type of work, we did see it tick down, and it was the result of the indirect and the direct impact of the Middle East. The $100 million that we called out was all in consulting type of work. We do expect in Q4, moving forward into Q4, AFS will return to growth, and we do expect a tick up, which is comprised of both the AFS returning to growth as well as we've had four consecutive quarters, as you call out, of consulting bookings growth.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Jason, the consulting bookings growth is very much driven towards the fundamentals that we continue to see, which is clients saying we really actually have to reinvent meaning. We're not just in our managed services deals looking for just efficiency. We've seen a three-quarter trend now of more consulting work in those large programs for managed services because our clients are asking us to help them use AI and change the processes to do more change management to really embed new ways of working.

We're seeing that consulting grow in a lot of these larger deals that also include managed services, and it's a direct result of our strategy that says this is not a technology play, it's a business play.

Jason Kupferberg

Understood. Okay. Just to follow up on Q4.

At the midpoint of the 1-5 range, are you assuming a similar $100 million headwind as you saw in Q3? If you can just parse out your expectations on consulting for managed services growth for Q4, that would be great. Thanks again.

Angie Park

Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Jason. Overall, the impact that we saw was really at the latter part or the last few weeks of the quarter. We expect that to continue for the full of Q4.

That is factored into what we expect. Overall for the year, we expect consulting to be in the low single digits and managed services to continue to be in the mid-single digits.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Operator, next question, please.

Operator

Yes, ma'am. Our next question comes from Kevin McVeigh at UBS. Please go ahead.

Kevin McVeigh

Great. Thanks so much. With the $9 billion M&A, that's obviously up from $5 billion.

Is there any way to think about how that settles in 2027 in terms of the dollar contribution of that? What type of growth is associated with those acquisitions?

Angie Park

Chief Financial Officer

Hi, Kevin. Good morning.

Kevin McVeigh

Good morning.

Angie Park

Chief Financial Officer

Hi. Overall, with the $9 billion of acquisition spend as we look forward into 2027, based upon the timing of when these close and the profile of the acquisitions themselves, we look to enter FY 2027 with slightly under at 2% of inorganic contribution from these deals.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Yeah. Kevin, in terms of just the profile of that revenue, what you're seeing is that we are moving into higher growth areas. We're really excited about the cybersecurity acquisitions that we just announced.

That's $208 million ARR growing at 48%. That's just an example of how we're using the acquisitions to move into higher growth areas, and they have a different profile in terms of their commercial models. One of the things that I've said consistently is that in things that our clients have been buying and services for a long time, it's going to take a while to change the buying patterns.

It's much easier to go into new categories or to provide new kinds of value, and switch to non-FTE models. You've seen that with what we just did with cybersecurity. You saw that with Ookla.

We announced Alfahealth this week in Italy. That's also a services and platform combination. We're going to continue to move ourselves into non-FTE, in part by these acquisitions that will then drive organic growth.

Kevin McVeigh

That's helpful. Then, I guess with the shift to Accenture Edge, any thoughts as to go to market? Is it similar to the traditional?

Should we expect similar mix of consulting versus managed services? Does that impact the Microsoft relationship at all?

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

No, in fact, it should amplify that because We've done a great job with Microsoft, and we now are even putting more resources into focusing on the mid-market. There's going to be a lot of pull-through across the board. Avanade has been super successful.

We have been making some acquisitions in this area. The way we go to market there is really ecosystem-led. What we can now do is like, say, we're in with one system partner and there's another opportunity, it's much easier to pull them in, which is why we think it'll amplify what we're doing with Avanade, and there's a seamless integration to make sure that that's what we're doing.

We're also doing it in a much more efficient and focused way because our clients in the mid-market don't need the same client coverage model that we use for larger enterprises. That's what's really exciting about this. When you think about it, the industry has had this challenge now for a few years on discretionary spend, which is really smaller deals.

Going into the mid-market in a big way is going to allow us to structurally offset the challenge on the discretionary spend for large enterprises through this. We're really excited. It's obviously early days, but we've got a great track record with Avanade, and we think it'll amplify Microsoft and the other ecosystem partners that the mid-market needs.

Kevin McVeigh

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question today comes from James Schneider at Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

James Schneider

Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I was wondering if you maybe comment broadly on the client budgetary impact you're seeing from AI infrastructure spending and token spending specifically, in terms of upward pressure on their budgets.

What impact are you seeing on what you view as to be your addressable TAM in terms of services and even software? Are you seeing any kind of change that would drive some moderation in that infrastructure spending to benefit you in the coming quarters?

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Yeah. Jim, one of the things we're clearly seeing, in fact, we have a whole practice that we're starting to grow now is on how to help clients optimize their use of tokens. It feels a lot like the cloud scenario.

We remember when people were moving to the cloud, then they were like, "Oh, wait a minute. We're spending a lot more on the cloud than we thought." We built a whole FinOps practice on helping optimize cloud. We definitely think that we're seeing that with the clients, and they're coming to us because we're doing a really good job ourselves of being able to know how you use the tokens, which models you use for which problems.

That's something we've been focused on since the very beginning. It's also helping because we have delivered real ROI, and our clients are seeing the spend, but they're struggling with the ROI. It's helping us there.

At the same time, there's a certain amount of spending that's going to happen, so we're not seeing it be material to impact the spend on services today. If anything, we think it's going to drive more to use services, and that's how we're seeing it develop. One of the things that we're really focused on is expanding our TAM in other ways, right?

Because the budgets haven't been, even with AI, they're spending it differently, but they haven't been increasing. That's why moving into cyber security platform business more than triples our total addressable market in OT security. The mid-market is a massive TAM, and that's not been a focus of ours other than generally.

We are really focused on expanding our TAM while we're capturing more of the AI spend.

James Schneider

That's helpful. Then maybe just as a follow-up, in terms of M&A strategy, clearly you've been pivoting towards more product-based acquisitions, both with the cyber assets you just announced today as well as Ookla. Would you expect, given software valuations are where they are today, you'll be more aggressive going into fiscal 2027 in maybe even harder toward software acquisitions in the next few quarters?

Thank you.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Yeah. We are definitely seeing at our clients this convergence between services and software, and specifically areas where it requires domain knowledge, requires deep understanding of the enterprise. OT security is perfect.

It integrates with all of our other tech ecosystem partners, but it really requires supply chain and engineering and so many skills beyond security. We are going to continue to look at those opportunities because particularly as the technology and AI changes so much, clients are looking for more and more opportunities to not have to build things, to not have to try to figure it out themselves. These are areas where we're embedding expertise and data, and that's like our focus with that real expertise.

In addition to looking at it for acquisitions, we're also going to be building more and more, and we've already started with our ecosystem partners, where we're basically going to have IP together that creates solutions that also drive then our services. We're building them ourselves. For example, our tokenomics platform internally, we're now taking to clients, and that's a platform we built to optimize tokens.

The strategy is around acquiring and partnering and building. You should expect that because those are the opportunities we see in the market for growth, that we'll continue to focus there. As well as AI enablers, right?

Cybersecurity, capital projects, data centers.

James Schneider

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question today comes from Dave Koning at Baird. Please go ahead.

Dave Koning

Yeah. Hey, guys. Thanks so much.

Maybe just there's so many crosscurrents right now, macro, AI, just AI impacts, et cetera. When you strip everything out around macro, et cetera, do you believe that there's actually underlying fundamental building of the AI demand? Would you expect, even though we see numbers decelerating a bit, that the actual underlying demand for newer activity is building and can drive acceleration in coming quarters and years?

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Absolutely, David, we see that building every quarter. Think about our clients with $100 million of bookings of more. It's 104, nine months in.

That's 13% more than last year at this time. We called out that we're starting to see the AI large enterprise programs where they're not just use cases, but really embedding it. British Telecom Group is a great example.

Stellantis is a great example. Stellantis is across their manufacturing. British Telecom is across their operations.

When we look at the AI projects themselves, while still small, there's been a steady increase in the average size. You're seeing that, you're seeing that we're starting to have those green shoots of where clients have more mature digital cores where we've helped them then the next step of these bigger AI programs. That fundamental building of every quarter is continuing.

The demand is the same. Getting ready for AI and then deploying AI. We're really optimistic because we believe AI is going to be a tailwind as it scales for us in the industry.

Dave Koning

Thank you. One just numbers question for Angie. Fiscal 2027 margins, should we expect anything different than the normal 10 to 30 basis points?

I know with the new acquisitions coming on and investments, et cetera, but is the underlying margin expansion still expected to be about the same as normal?

Angie Park

Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. David, we'll give you updates on our overall FY 2027 outlook, but our goal is always to continue to drive improved gross margins, improved SG&A, while we invest significantly in our business.

Dave Koning

Great. Thanks, guys.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question today comes from James Faucette with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

James Faucette

I wanted to just spend a moment to sensitize us to the fourth quarter. I hear you very loud and clear that there's a wider potential range. At the same time, we're getting almost 2% of inorganic contribution plus a recovery in Federal Services.

Should I interpret, perhaps at the low end of your range, ongoing deterioration that you seem to have indicated it's started to materialize in the latter part of the quarter versus, if to get to the upper part of the range, it would be some improvement there and maybe middle of stabilization? I'm just trying to understand the scenario that you're trying to sensitize us to for the fourth quarter.

Angie Park

Chief Financial Officer

James. Yes, that's correct.

James Faucette

Okay. Turning to the acquisitions, really intriguing and then obviously a lot of questions on this morning. I'm wondering how we should think about this type of product-driven acquisitions.

Is this really where we should think about Accenture being focused on a go-forward basis? What are the implications that we should have in our minds about the impact to long-term margins, margin trajectory, et cetera? Thanks.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Sure, James. First of all, our acquisitions are going to continue to be a mix of services and products. We are skewing, however, toward where we see the demand, which is in areas where we uniquely have the domain expertise the clients needed.

It's usually triggered by AI. That's what we're seeing. We're skewing our acquisitions to where we see the biggest growth opportunities right now, and where we see the biggest growth opportunities on the product side are in these areas that are being triggered by AI.

I'll talk about valuations in a minute. We're also continuing to do services acquisitions, but again, in the higher growth areas, and we have seen higher valuations even for the services acquisitions like the data centers, but it's also paying off for growth, right? If you think about what we did with DLB Associates, that acquisition, they're growing very high double digits, right?

Think about our acquisitions as getting into higher growth areas, meeting where the biggest opportunity is, and shifting us to more non-FTE. The valuations on the services we're seeing are ticking up because they're in demand, and we have different valuations for software and products, and we're being very transparent so that you can understand. By the way, Angie never gives you something early for 2027, and we wanted to give you that on the acquisitions to help you think about the impact.

Alexia Quadrani

All right, operator, we have time for one more question, Julie will wrap up the call.

Operator

Yes, ma'am. Our final question comes from Jamie Friedman of Susquehanna. Please go ahead.

Jamie Friedman

Hi, good morning. Thank you for the additional disclosures here, especially around security. I had a question about consulting.

The consulting book that bill was solid again, it was over 1.1 this quarter. It was 1.3 last quarter. I know there could be some FX in there.

That's despite some of the headwinds you called out, Angie Park. I was wondering if you could unpack some of the consulting by type of work, for example, technology consulting, strategy consulting. You mentioned change management, Julie Sweet.

It must be a dynamic time to be a consultant. I was wondering what parts of consulting you're seeing particular demand for.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Sure, Jamie. First of all, our clients really do buy solutions. We don't think of it as strategy or this kind of.

I think what you're getting at is what are the types of areas. For example, digital manufacturing, cybersecurity, change management embedded in bigger programs, marketing because it's driving growth. Think about what's driving this is where clients can get more growth and/or efficiency.

Of course, our cost consulting is also going up, like how do you look across the enterprise? It's pretty broad-based in terms of the functions. It's all places where you can really get an ROI.

Clients are very focused on whatever the kind of work, whether it's AI or not, in tangible results. Look, that's why clients come to us, right? When you have clients doing $100 million bookings, you don't sign those kinds of deals unless you have confidence that you're going to get results.

That's a real theme in our competitive differentiation and why we're taking market share is across the board, clients are focused, whatever kind of work, on clear ROI.

Jamie Friedman

Thank you. For my follow-up, last quarter, Q2, you had a disclosure about 2025 fixed price at 60% of work. Can you talk about the evolution of fixed price?

Is that type of work in particular demand? How the margin characteristics of fixed price may compare to the other dimensions of the company? Thank you.

Angie Park

Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Jamie, let me take that. We continue to see our fixed price work be over 60% and continuing to increase. There's no real difference as we look at it by type of work.

It's in the similar zone for both consulting as well as managed services, and obviously, you see that play out in our margins overall as well. Margin's not a big difference that I would call out relative to fixed price versus the other commercial constructs, but it is embedded in our 20 basis points of expansion for the year.

Julie Sweet

Chair & CEO

Thank you, everyone. In closing, I want to thank all of our shareholders for your continued trust and support, and I want to thank all of our Re-inventers for everything you do every day for our clients and our communities. We'll talk to you next quarter.

Operator

Thank you. That concludes today's conference call. We thank you all for attending today's presentation.

You may now disconnect your lines and have a wonderful day.