Operator instructions.: Scott Hoffman(?) – Financial Dynamics: Thank you, Operator, and good morning, everyone. By now you should have received a copy of the company’s Q3 2006 earnings release. If you have not, please call our offices at 212 850 5600 and we’ll be sure to get a copy sent to you. On the call, we have Lakshmi Naravanan, President and Chief Executive Officer, Francisco D’Souza, Chief Operating Officer, and Gordon Coburn, Chief Financial Officer of Cognizant Technology Solutions. Before we begin, I’d like to remind you that some of the comments made on today’s call and some of the responses to your questions may contain forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to the risks and uncertainties as described in the company’s earnings release and other filings with the SEC. I would now call like to turn the call over to Lakshmi. Please go ahead, Lakshmi. Lakshmi Naravanan – President, Chief Executive Officer: Thank you, Scott, and good morning everyone. Thank you for joining us today for our conference call. This morning I’ll provide an overview of the highlights of Q3 and the strategic enrichment we are steadily making in the business as well as our industry-leading growth that keeps us ahead of the curve in meeting customer demands. I’ll be joined on today’s call by our COO, Francisco D’Souza, who will give color on the drivers of our success here in the quarter, and our Chief Financial Officer, Gordon Coburn, who will take us through our numbers in greater detail. Turning to highlights of Q3, we are pleased with our strong financial performance and tremendous growth across the company. Our success this quarter was driven by our ability to leverage Cognizant’s leadership in our core vertical markets and service offerings, to bring new business from both new and existing customers. We had particularly strong performance in our healthcare and life sciences verticals, which posted 19% sequential growth and 86% growth compared to Q3 2005. As usual, we continued to benefit from our leadership position in our financial business, which grew 12% sequentially and 54% YoverY. During the quarter, we capitalized on the strong demand on our entire portfolio of service offerings marked by impressive growth in areas of recent enrichment, such as ERP, CRM, high-end vertical BPO and IP infrastructure management. I’m also pleased to report that we have seen strong momentum in our newer customer markets across the globe, particularly continental Europe, where growth exceeded the company average again this quarter. Turning to the financial results and looking at our Q3 results in detail, we once again exceeded expectations generating $377.5 million in revenue, which represents an increase of 60% from Q3 2005. GAAP EPS was $0.40 for the quarter, up from $0.37 last quarter. We had a net increase of 57 clients during the quarter, including those added to our AimNet acquisition, and our number of strategic accounts – those with the potential to generate between $5 and $40 million or more in annual revenue for Cognizant over the long term increased by five. Our GAAP operating margin was 18.2% and our non-GAAP operating margin which excludes stock-based compensation expense was a really strong 20.2%, at the top end of our long-term target range of 19% to 20%. Overall, I am very pleased with our strong financial and operating performance in 2006 so far, Cognizant has already accelerated past the $1 billion annual revenue mark, and we are increasingly confident in the strength of our operating platform as we move into the next phase of our growth. As demand for our services continues to escalate, we recognize the importance of building the necessary foundations to support Cognizant’s growth and generate the flexibility we need to growth the company as an industry-leading group. Before I turn the call over to Frank, I’m also pleased to report that the management transition we announced last quarter is progressing according to plan. I anticipate a very smooth transition under Frank’s leadership as we move forward with our growth plans for 2007. I would now like to turn the call over to Frank, who’ll give color on some of the operational highlights in the quarter and the emerging growth areas for Cognizant. Frank? Francisco D’Souza – Chief Operating Officer: Thanks Lakshmi, and good morning, everyone. As Lakshmi mentioned, I will briefly discuss several of the key drivers of our financial and operating success during the quarter. I’ll also discuss several of the strategic investments we have made in our infrastructure and our service offerings that are moving us quickly to the next phase of our growth. Then I’ll turn the call over to Gordon, who’ll take you through our financials in greater detail. Our success in growing the company while consistently maintaining our operating performance and client satisfaction is a testament to the effectiveness of our long-term reinvestment strategy. In order to maintain operating performance and rapid growth simultaneously, we carefully focus our investments on internal infrastructure to manage our operating performance and also in areas that allow us to maintain or develop leading positions in key markets. I’d like to touch upon key investments that we have made during Q3 in each of these two areas. Let me start by providing some color around the investments that we are making to develop a leading position in key markets. Our financial performance is the result of an increasingly diversified revenue stream every quarter. We consistently make investments which distinguish Cognizant as a market leader across our core vertical businesses and horizontal service offerings. Our Q3 results reflect our ability to leverage Cognizant’s leadership in these markets, both to expand our strategic customer relationships and also to win new business. The success of our approach is evident in the performance of our healthcare and life sciences business where as Lakshmi noted, we further strengthened our market leadership during Q3. In healthcare where we count three of the top five care organizations among our customers, we now have over 4,000 associates serving the industry segment. In 2006, Healthcare Informatics Magazine ranked Cognizant number 21 on their list of top healthcare IT providers. We continue to see robust growth in this industry, driven by clients who have engaged Cognizant to help them address the IT issues associated with regulatory compliance requirements such as the Medicare part, the drug benefits and National Provider Identifier, consumer-driven healthcare and industry consolidation. These solution offerings are strong examples of the results of our investments in building our healthcare industry domain expertise. Our healthcare vertical is one of the oldest at Cognizant and as a result of over a decade of serving this industry and building our industry expertise over that time, we are now able to capitalize on opportunities to help care organizations re-engineer their business processes and develop state of the art solutions far beyond technology skill-based services. We are now helping healthcare players enhance the quality of services they provide to their members, meet enrolment target objectives and integrate related back-end processes. Healthcare companies are increasingly transitioning from paper to electronic processing and many of these companies have turned to Cognizant to increase their operating efficiencies through business process management and workflow automation engagements. For example, a large payroll organization has engaged Cognizant to implement an imaging and workflow system which streamlines health insurance application processing. This system fundamentally changes the way health insurance underwriters utilize technology and positions our customer at the vanguard of new technology adoption. In addition, as the healthcare industry consolidates, our portfolio rationalization and systems consolidation services provide our customers with a comprehensive assessment of systems integration, risk, and opportunities as they seek to strengthen their businesses through mergers and acquisitions. Another area where we have been investing to develop a market-leading position is in our life sciences business, where we continue to expand wallet share among our top pharma customers. Today we count seven of the top 10 global pharmaceutical companies and five of the world’s largest biotech companies among our customers. Our success and recognition as a market leader stems from the depth and breadth of our life sciences vertical which we have build by serving the life sciences industry over almost 13 years, dating back to our first engagements with IMS Health. As with healthcare, we have systematically built our domain expertise in life sciences by actively building internal knowledge repositories, investing heavily in developing core capabilities for life sciences customers in FDA and EMEA regulation and establishing ourselves as thought leaders in various life sciences industry forums. As an active participant in the life sciences industry for many years, we have been able to observe, participate in and shape the outcome of many key industry wide initiatives. We have built a leadership position with over 2,200 staff whose domain knowledge and expertise in developing solutions across the spectrum of the life sciences value chain, from discovery to commercialization, has established Cognizant as one of the top outsourcing providers in the pharmaceutical and life sciences industry. An example of the success of our investments is the fact that Cognizant is now recognized as an industry leader in services relating to CRM systems for the life sciences industry. Our services in this area range from multi-country, Siebel CRM implementation, implementations for several of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies to large-scale enterprise customer implementations for a global pharmaceutical company and one of the largest biotech firms. These services demonstrate our ability to combine our life sciences expertise with our technology and project and program management expertise to drive significant value for our customers. We believe that these markets will continue to offer tremendous potential for Cognizant in the years ahead. As you know, we significantly enhanced our IT infrastructure services business with the acquisition of AimNet Solutions Incorporated, a managed infrastructure and professional services firm, in September, another example of the investments that we are making to develop a market-leading position in key areas. The acquisition provides us with an even stronger ITIS service offering, led by Ed Nalbandian, the former managing partner of AT&T’s managed network solutions organization, a state of the art network operations center in the US, a world-class scaleable infrastructure management software platform, an infrastructure services consulting organization and a strong base of customer relationships. Through the on-target management platform, a multi-million dollar investment made by AimNet before we acquired the firm, we are able to run global network operations centers on a single platform and move work seamlessly around the globe. For critical services like ITIS, this blended model has the implicit back up and facilitates a severe level of business continuity. The integration has been very successful thus far and we have already generated a number of new client opportunities. Today we are managing or monitoring approximately 1.3 million elements across a broad spectrum of infrastructure, spanning servers, batch jobs, applications, databases and network devices. ERP is another area in which our strategic investments have been driving significant growth over the last several quarters. Because of our strong relationship with SAP and the deep knowledge of the next generation NetWeaver platform, cultivated at our NetWeaver test center, we have further extended our track record of winning strategic deals for complex, large-scale implementation and support against other top players in the manufacturing industries. During the quarter, we had four large SAP customer wins in the healthcare, financial services, life sciences and manufacturing industries. The industry breadth of our SAP wins this quarter is a demonstration of the fact that our SAP strategy is now extending across most of the major industry verticals that we serve. Business process outsourcing is another service area where we saw substantial growth in Q3, driven by strong client demand for our vertical BPO services. During the quarter, we won several new clients, including a leading building materials supplier, home mortgage lender and an oil and gas accounting services firm. We now have BPO head count in excess of 850, representing over 100% growth since the beginning of the year. As we have emphasized in the past, our BPO strategy is focused on industry-specific processes, such as back office reconciliation, claims processing and clinical data management. These are all areas where we believe that Cognizant holds a distinct competitive advantage, stemming from our investments in our industry vertical businesses. We combine the cost benefits of offshore outsourcing with our process system optimization expertise to create a unique customer value proposition. For examples, Cognizant is working with the equity research department of a leading Wall Street investment bank to automate data collection tasks and generate new content that will use improved research. Prior to engaging Cognizant, the bank relied on a cumbersome manual process for collecting large volumes of data. This process restricted the bank’s speed and the ability of the analysts to expand their areas of research. Since our engagement, the client has seen an improvement in delivery timeliness of more than 97% and data error rates of less than 1%. The combination of process automation and economies of scale have produced significant cost savings for the clients while enabling its analysts to focus substantially more time on analysis rather than data aggregation. Today we are seeing robust BPO activity across a broad spectrum of sectors including banking and financial services, healthcare, life sciences and utilities. Over the coming quarters, we expect to grow our BPO business aggressively with the object of making Cognizant a recognized leader in providing reliable, cost-effective and value-added outsourcing solutions that effectively address our customers’ complex business process environment. I would now like to turn to investments that we are making in our infrastructure to sustain our growth. During Q3, we continued to expand our people, geographic and physical infrastructure to prepare ourselves for substantial growth on a global scale over the next year. In building the foundation for future growth, we aggressively invested in building our employee base, increasing our headcount by over 15% sequentially and adding about 4,700 employees around the world. We were very pleased with our ability to attract the best talent in the industry, a testament to Cognizant’s reputation as an employer of choice in our industry. During Q3, we saw a reversal of the positive attrition trends from earlier this year. For the first six months of 2006, our annualized attrition of 13.2% was running about two percentage points below our annualized attrition of 15.3% for the first half of 2005. Yet attrition in Q3 increased to about 20%, four percentage points higher than in Q3 2005. It is important to note that our YTD annualized attrition is approximately 15.5%, roughly equal to our attrition rate for the same period during 2005 and that attrition is an issue that our entire industry is facing. Historically we have experienced an increase in attrition in Q3, as those employees returning to graduate school leave the company. However, the recent increase was certainly higher than we expected or desired. Based on our extensive exit interview process, higher education ranks highly but no single factor accounts for the recent increase. We also recently completed our employee satisfaction survey which is conducted annually by the HayGroup. Overall satisfaction is up from last year, the second consecutive year of improvement. Our overall scores improved across all geographies with a significant improvement in Europe reflecting the investments we have made in that market over the past year. Reflecting our company strategy, customer satisfaction and quality continues to be our highest rated category. We refresh the employee satisfaction survey every year for relevance to ensure that we’re capturing feedback on the current issues affecting employees. Fundamentally, we are committed to returning attrition to its normalized levels and ensuring that our employees have world class opportunities to develop their talents and careers within Cognizant. Our October numbers show lower attrition rates than Q3 and we will continue to closely monitor the trend. We continued to build our European business by focusing on building our infrastructure by country to meet the growing demand for our services, particularly in northern Europe, France and Germany. We have built regional management teams and distributed Cognizant veterans around the world to further develop our European infrastructure and focus on the unique needs of customers in each country to more effectively serve our existing customers and address the long-term opportunity Europe represents for Cognizant. As we announced this morning, we continue to make significant investments in our global infrastructure by building out our campus footprint across India to enhance our flexibility as we grow the company. This program involves the construction over 3 million square feet of office space in India, across five cities, demonstrating our commitment to staying ahead of our growth by proactively planning our investments and capacity. We will be investing over $200 million to expand our own infrastructure over the next two years. Gordon will provide you with more details on our plans later in the call. Overall, we are very pleased with our performance this quarter. Now I’ll turn the call over to Gordon, to walk you through our financials and infrastructure expansion program in greater detail. Gordon? Gordon Coburn – Chief Financial Officer: Thank you, Francisco, and thank you, Lakshmi. Good morning to everyone. I would like to provide some additional information on Q3 and then discuss our financial expectations for the remainder of this year. Revenue for Q3 significantly exceeded our prior guidance and expectations due to continued application management ramp-up of clients we have won over the past few years, as well as continued greater-than-anticipated strength in discretionary development spending. Quarterly revenue grew 12% sequentially and 60% YoverY. YTD revenue was up 59% compared to the first three quarters of 2005. During the quarter, we continued to see healthy volume growth across a broad range of services and industries. During Q3 our financial services segment, which includes our practices in insurance, banking and transaction processing, grew by approximately $64 million YoverY and represented 48% of revenue for the quarter. Healthcare grew over $40 million and represented 23% of revenues. Retail, manufacturing, and logistics grew by over $16 million, representing approximately 15% of revenues for the quarter. The remaining 14% of our revenues came primarily from other service-oriented industries including telecoms, media and new technology, which grew by over $20 million compared to Q3 of last year. During the quarter, financial services grew by 54% YoverY and 12% sequentially. Healthcare grew 86% YoverY and 19% sequentially. Growth in our healthcare segment was driven by the numerous life sciences clients we have won recently and are now ramping up as well as expansion of the work we do for our healthcare peer clients. Retail, manufacturing and logistics grew 44% YoverY and 6% sequentially, and our ‘Other’ segment grew 65% YoverY, and 9% sequentially. For the quarter, application management represented 52% of revenues and application development was 48%. Both services grew significantly in Q3. On a YoverY basis application management grew 62%, and application development grew 59%. On a quarterly sequential basis, application management grew 14% and development grew 10%, reflecting the strong demand environment for our entire service offering. During the quarter, 86% of revenue came from clients in North America, Europe was 13% of total revenue. The remaining 1% of revenue came from the Asian market. Our European business grew 16% sequentially and 87% YoverY as we continued to invest in that region. We added 83 new customers during Q3, 37 of which were from our acquisition of AimNet. We closed the quarter with an active customer base of approximately 330 clients. During the quarter, the number of accounts which we consider to be strategic and have the potential to become significant revenue sources for us in the future increased by five, bringing our total number of strategic clients to 82. We ended work for approximately 26 clients during the quarter, almost all of which were very small clients. Turning to costs, on a GAAP basis cost of revenues exclusive of depreciation and amortization increased 63% for the quarter as compared to Q3 2005. Q3 cost of cost of revenues included approximately $3.4 million of equity based compensation expense. The increase in cost of revenues is due to additional technical staff, both onsite and offshore, required to support our revenue growth. We increased our technical staff by close to 4,500 during the quarter and ended the quarter with almost 32,250 technical staff. This is a net increase of over 11,000 technical staff from September 30th of 2005. SG&A, depreciation and amortization expenses were $100.3 million on a GAAP basis, up from $60.3 million in Q3 2005. GAAP SG&A expense in Q3 including approximately $4 million of equity based compensation expenses. GAAP operating income for the quarter increased 46% to $68.8 million compared to $47 million in Q3 2005. On a non-GAAP basis, which excludes the impact of $7.5 million of equity based compensation expense, our operating income for Q3 was $76.2 million, up 62% from last year. Our GAAP operating margin was 18.2% for the quarter and our non-GAAP operating margin for the quarter was 20.2%, slightly above our target range of 19-20%. Interest income for Q3 increased to $4.8 million compared to $2.2 million in Q3 2005. Interest income increased due to our higher global cash and short term investments balance as well as an increase in short-term interest rates. We had a $600,000 foreign exchange loss during the quarter. Our GAAP tax rate for Q3 was 16.3% bring our YTD GAAP tax rate to 16.5%. Turning to the balance sheet, our balance sheet remained very healthy. We finished Q3 with over $535 million of cash and short-term investments, up over $111 million from the beginning of this year and up over $67 million from June 30, 2006. During Q3, operating activities generated approximately $87 million of cash. Financing activities, primarily the exercise of stock options, generated approximately $21 million of cash. These amounts were partially offset by approximately $26 million of capital expenditures, and $15 million for the acquisition of AimNet. In addition, we generated approximately $100,000 of cash due to currency translation adjustments. Our collection of trade receivables during the quarter continued not to be as strong as we would have liked. Based on our $297 million balance on September 30, we finished the quarter with a DSO, including unbilled receivables, of 72 days compared to 67 days for the same period last year and 72 days in Q2 of 2006. During Q3, excluding unbilled receivables, our DSO was approximately 62 days. The quality of our receivables portfolio remains very strong. Our unbilled receivables balance was approximately $43 million at the end of Q3, up about $18 million from September 30, 2005 and up $4.5 million from Q2 of this year. The increase in unbilled receivables resulted primarily from the timing of billing milestones and more importantly, the volume associated with our continued revenue growth. During Q3, overall 24.2% of our revenues came from fixed-bid contracts, down from 25.2% in Q2 2006 and unchanged from the 24.2% level in Q3 2005. When we look at the mix by solution type during the quarter, 29% of our development revenue and 20% of our maintenance revenue came from fixed-bid contracts during the quarter. Turing to headcount, at the end of Q3, our worldwide headcount, including both technical professionals and support staff, totaled approximately 34,365. This represents a net increase of about 4,700 people during the quarter, and close to 12,000 people compared to September of last year. Close to 60% of our Q3 hires were recent college graduates who will enter our training program, and the remainder were lateral hires of experienced IT professionals. Based on our 2006 revenue expectations and our ongoing success in recruiting, we currently expect to finish 2006 with approximately 38,000 employees and we are moving along well towards this goal, with over 35,400 people in the company as of today. As Franciso discussed earlier, turnover, including voluntary and involuntary, was approximately 20% annualized during Q3 compared to 16% in Q3 of 2005. On a trimmed 12-month basis, which is how attrition is reported by many in the industry, our total attrition was 15%, compared to 14.5% for the 12 month period ending September 30th 2005. Onsite utilization increased slightly to around 88% for the quarter. Offshore utilization, excluding recent college graduates who were in our training program during the quarter, was approximately 73%. Including trainees, offshore utilization was approximately 58% for the quarter. We had over 4,000 unbilled people in our training program at the end of the quarter. I would now like to comment on our growth expectations for the remainder of 2006. As Lakshmi and Francisco mentioned earlier in this call, the investments we are making are producing results. It is allowing us to differentiate ourselves in the marketplace, both in terms of winning and growing new clients, and expanding our service offerings. In addition, our client and employee satisfaction levels remain at a level at which we are proud. This has resulted in stronger than expected results in Q3, and is allowing us to significantly increase our guidance for 2006. We are now projecting revenue for Q4 of 2006 of at least $405 million. This represents over 7% sequential growth, and more than 57% YoverY growth. Q4 has approximately 2% fewer billing days than Q3. We continue to have significant revenue visibility due to our high level recurring revenue and the long-term nature of our customer relationships. In fact, today we have customer commitments for well over 90% of our Q4 revenue guidance. For the full year 2006, based on the strong demand environment for offshore services and our favorable experience on ramp-up rates, we now project the revenue to be at least $1.405 billion, up $25 million from our most recent guidance and up $145 million from our initial guidance for 2006. This represents growth of more than 58%. As has been typical in prior years we expect the majority of our growth for the remainder of 2006 will come from the ramp-up of clients we have won over the past few years. During the remainder of 2006, we intend to closely monitor our spending and expect our operating margin for the remaining quarter to remain in the range of 19% to 20% before the impact of stock-based compensation, in line with our historic margin level and prior guidance. As stated on previous occasions, please note that our operating margin target excludes the impact of equity-based compensation. With this expected level of revenue growth and our expected operating margins, we are currently comfortable with our ability to deliver in Q4 GAAP EPS of $0.42 and non-GAAP EPS of $0.47, excluding equity-based compensation expense of $0.05. This guidance includes the anticipation of a Q4 share count of approximately 151.8 million shares, a tax rate equally to our YTD rate and an operating margin in the upper half of our guidance range once again excluding equity compensation expense. Based on current business trends, we are increasing our expected GAAP EPS guidance for the full year 2006 to $1.51, up from our prior guidance of at least $1.45. On a full year non-GAAP basis, we expected EPS of $1.68, excluding equity-based compensation expense of $0.17. This guidance includes the anticipation of a full year share count of approximately 150.6 million shares. Finally, today we announced a significant expansion of our real estate construction plans in India. Through this expanded program, which includes the expenditure of over $200 million through to the end of 2008 on land acquisitions, facilities, construction and furnishings, we plan to build newly wholly-owned techno complexes that will significantly increase our existing campus footprint in India with the addition of over 3 million square feet of capacity for over 30,000 new employees. We plan to develop state of the art techno complexes and expand our infrastructure in Chennai, Coimbatore, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Pune. These campuses are planned to be built in regions designated as special economic zones. Construction is expected to being in Q1 2007, and continue through the end of 2008. In addition to construction of these facilities, we will continue to lease additional facilities throughout India as required to meet our headcount growth requirements. This investment is consistent with our strategy of making ahead-of-the-curve investments in our people and infrastructure. As we planned for the next phase of Cognizant’s growth, we are focused on building scale up to address the needs of our business around the world, building larger, Cognizant-owned facilities is a key part of this strategy. Now we would like to open the call for questions. Operator?