mumbai, April 15 -- The first signs of cracks are appearing in campus hirings this year, with companies changing recruitment plans due to artificial intelligence and the West Asia war, prompting colleges to caution newly recruited students of delayed onboarding and bringing back memories of pandemic-era job uncertainty. Software testing platform BrowserStack has rescinded offers to engineering students from the batch of 2026. The concerns percolate to the next batch, too, Companies are revising their internship terms for students from the batch of 2027 at India's leading B-schools and engineering colleges. These worrying signals come as the job market starts to feel the pressure of both AI and geopolitical conflicts, with companies scaling back their recruitment plans. "The decision to rescind extended to certain engineering students was a difficult one, made in the context of the significant productivity gains we see due to AI within our product and engineering functions," Rohit Munjal, senior vice president and head of people function at BrowserStack, told Mint in an email response. "We recognize the impact this has on the students involved and did not arrive at this decision lightly." He said that in the interest of transparency, the company communicated this decision to the affected candidates at the earliest opportunity, ensuring they had the clarity needed to actively pursue other career options. "We have also committed to these students that they will receive first-priority consideration should relevant roles become available in the future," Munjal added. While Munjal did not divulge the number of engineering students affected, the company said it is "on track" to onboard 15-plus MBA graduates. Mint has learnt that the number of affected engineering students exceeds the number of B-school graduates being hired. The withdrawal of offers was last widely seen during the pandemic. The batch of 2020 struggled as companies slowed recruitment while India Inc. navigated lockdowns and rapid digital transformation. The onboarding delays lasted for more than a year. Today, while companies across sectors have announced retrenchments due to AI, the other looming threat is from the war in West Asia. The impact will be felt by the 2025-2027 batch of India's top B-school students, who are currently interning. "We are observing the situation in the Middle East carefully to see if it affects recruitment at IIMA. So far, barring a few firms mentioning that the war may have ramifications for future hiring, there has not been much impact. It is true that a few firms wanted to renegotiate the nature of internships with us in recent days in a way that is acceptable to all parties concerned," said Viswanath Pingali, chairperson of placements at the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad. "This is probably keeping in view the dynamic situation of the war. All students have begun their internships as of now, and we have not seen anything to be alarmed about." Other IIMs are preparing for the uncertainties as well. "The main challenge we are navigating right now is the risk of delayed onboarding as companies naturally take a more cautious approach to new project kickoffs," said Himanshu Rai, director of IIM Indore. The B-school said it is "keeping a close, proactive dialogue with our corporate HR partners to solidify start dates and ensure the batch is supported and protected from any sudden market shifts". IIM Indore clarified that their final placements for the batch of 2026 have not faced any "major concerns or lingering challenges." In the case of summer internships for the batch of 2027, "there have been a few isolated, one-off instances where a firm modified some of the additional perks attached to an offer, likely as a minor internal budget adjustment. These are very much the exception, not the rule," Rai said....