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India's Wipro growth forecast hit by healthcare, weak retail

* Q4 net profit 22.67 bln rupees vs 21.19 bln estimate

* Sees Q1 revenue growth between -2 pct and flat vs Q4

* CEO says healthcare, retail clients weighing on growth (Adds CEO comment, details)

By Sankalp Phartiyal and Rishika Sadam

MUMBAI/BENGALURU, April 25 (Reuters) - Wipro Ltd, India's third-biggest software services exporter, said cancellations of healthcare projects and weak retail spending in its key U.S. market would hit revenue growth.

Headquartered in the south Indian technology hub of Bengaluru, Wipro said on Tuesday that its consolidated net profit grew 0.4 percent to 22.67 billion rupees ($353 million) in its fiscal fourth quarter to March.

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Although this was ahead of analysts' estimates of 21.19 billion rupees, the company said revenue from its core IT services business in would be $1.92 billion to $1.96 billion in the current quarter. On that basis, the company reported a revenue of $1.95 billion in the most recent quarter and revenues of $1.93 billion in the same quarter a year ago.

"We have had certain project cancellations in our healthcare business which will have an impact in Q1," Wipro Chief Executive Abidali Z. Neemuchwala told reporters, adding that the weaker forecast was also due, in part, to retail clients holding back on spending.

Emkay Global, a Mumbai brokerage, said Wipro's revenue outlook was lower than its expectations of quarter-on-quarter growth of between 0.5 percent and 1.5 percent.

Wipro's muted outlook comes as Indian software service firms brace for new visa rules in the U.S. and growing protectionism in countries such as Australia and New Zealand.

India's $150 billion information technology sector has struggled over the past few quarters as clients in the United States held back discretionary spending to gauge policy direction under U.S. President Donald Trump's administration.

Wipro's bigger rivals Tata Consultancy Services and Infosys Ltd, which earlier this month reported fourth-quarter results, have also been cautious in their outlooks. They use the visa programme to fly engineers to the U.S. to service clients.

Neemuchwala said Wipro applied for fewer H-1B visas this year compared with the last, as it aims to boost local hires in the U.S. to more than half of its staff there by March 2018. He added that client sentiment remained strong in the U.S. as businesses need technology to remain competitive.

The company's finance chief Jatin Dalal, in a telephone interview with Reuters, said he expected the digital business to be a growth driver.

"Digital, cloud, applications and consulting will be the flavour of tomorrow," Dalal said.

Wipro also said it would issue one free share for every share held and that it could consider a share buyback in July, moves that are expected to boost investor sentiment.

Ahead of the results, shares in Wipro with a market value of about $19 billion, closed 0.6 percent higher in a Mumbai market that rose about 1 percent. ($1 = 64.2650 Indian rupees) (Reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal and Rishika Sadam; Additional reporting by Samantha Kareen Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Keith Weir/David Evans/Alexander Smith)