Foreign institutional investors (FII) FY2025 was a pure vendor, who was launching domestic equity of Rs 1,27,401 crore. However, there has been a significant decrease in the intensity of selling in March, with FIIs sell shares worth Rs 3,972.61 crore.
During this time, Domestic institutional investor According to an ET report quoting Ritesh Presswala’s figures, March in March with March with March, buying shares of Rs 6,06,368 crore with march, remaining continuous buyers (DIIs) throughout the year (DII).
On Friday, FIIS sold shares worth Rs 4,352.82 crore, while DIIs were pure buyers, buying Rs 7,646.49 crore. Throughout the financial year, FIIs were net sellers on seven occasions, with the best-selling sell-offs in October and January, when FIIs used to sell Rs 94,017 crore and Rs 78,027 crore respectively.
FII was a pure buyers in June, July, August, September and December, with the highest shopping in September, an amount of Rs 57,724 crore.
Dies were bulish Indian equities Throughout the year, there was no net selling activity with no month. In October and January, the highest DII was purchased for Rs 1,07,255 crore and Rs 86,592 crore respectively.
VK Vijaykumar, the main investment strategist at Geogit Investments, noticed that the change in FII strategy – from continuous sales to minor purchases – was visible in the week ending March 21, and gained momentum next week. In the FII flow, this inverted contributed to about 6% of the Nifty’s profit in March, ending the five -month decline, the longest streak since the establishment of the index in 1996.
Vijaykumar attributed the change in three major factors: First, attractive assessment, first of all, after a 16% decline in Nifty from September Summit; Second, the appreciation of the rupee, which reversed the speed trade towards American investments; And the third, GDP, IIP and CPI inflation reforms India’s comprehensive economic indicators, which paved the way for the market rally.
Moving forward, the trend in FII flow will largely depend on mutual tariffs that are expected to be imposed on the US on 2 April. If the tariffs are not serious, the rally may continue.
Manoj Purohit, a partner and leader in BDO India, pointed to another important development. SEBI’s recent announcement about the FPI community can serve as a emotion booster. Based on the reactions of large banks about the ban on the ban on P-Nots Trading Volume, the threshold has increased from Rs 25,000 crore to Rs 50,000 crore to Rs 50,000 crore for the revelations of granular beneficial ownership.
The FPI will continue to follow the first limit with more than 50% of its portfolio in a single corporate group. This change is expected to bring back very important quantities in trades and liquidity in the market.
In addition, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is set to double CAP on investment up to 10%by individual foreign investors in listed companies. The move aims to attract more capital flows in the Indian market, according to senior government officials and documents reviewed by Reuters.
Disclaimer: The opinion, analysis and recommendations expressed here are of brokerage and do not reflect the views of the Times of India. Always consult a qualified investment advisor or financial planner before taking any investment decision.
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.
Related Posts
Add A Comment