The value of the foreign portfolio investors' (FPI) holdings in the domestic equities reached USD 667 billion in the three months ended September 2021, a surge of 13 per cent from the preceding quarter, according to a Morningstar report.
For the quarter ended September 2021, FPIs witnessed a net inflow of $563 million. It was, however, lower than the net inflows of $678 million seen during the quarter ended June.
The value of the foreign portfolio investors' (FPI) holdings in the domestic equities reached USD 667 billion in the three months ended September 2021, a surge of 13 per cent from the preceding quarter, according to a Morningstar report.
This was largely on the back of strong performance by the Indian equity markets along with net inflows from FPIs at the later part of the quarter.
"At the end of the quarter ended September 2021, the value of FPI investments in Indian equities shot up sharply to $667 billion, which was considerably higher than the $592 billion recorded in the previous quarter, a spike of around 13 per cent," the report noted.
As of September 2020, the value of FPI investments in Indian equities had been $398 billion.
However, FPIs' contributions to Indian equity market capitalisation fell marginally during the quarter under review to 19 per cent from 19.1 per cent for the June quarter.
Offshore mutual funds form an important component of total foreign portfolio investment, apart from other large FPIs, such as offshore insurance companies, hedge funds, and sovereign wealth funds.
For the quarter ended September 2021, FPIs witnessed a net inflow of $563 million. It was, however, lower than the net inflows of $678 million seen during the quarter ended June.
On a month-on-month basis, while overseas investors were net sellers to the tune of $1.51 billion in July; they were net buyers of around $284.02 million in August and to the tune of $1.79 billion in September.
From a cautious stance, FPIs shifted gears to a more confident investment approach towards Indian equities as the quarter progressed. Both domestic, as well as global factors, dictated the direction of such flows into the Indian equity markets.
"The US Fed's hawkish statement that it might raise interest rates much earlier than assumed was the precursor for the change in their stance," the report noted.
According to the report, foreign investors also started to stay on the sidelines, waiting for more strong and stable signs of recovery in the economy and corporate earnings after the second wave of the pandemic.
But since Indian equities offer an attractive investment proposition from the long-term perspective, FPIs gradually started to invest there as the quarter progressed.
"The strong bullish undercurrent in the Indian markets, positive long-term outlook, the expectation of economic rebound, and improvement in corporate earnings aided FPIs to invest in the Indian equities," the report mentioned.
Moreover, the strong rally in Indian stocks was hard for FPIs to ignore as they decided to be a part of it rather than missing out, it noted.
Also, the turmoil in China benefitted India, making it an attractive investment destination among foreign investors, it added.
However, once again foreign investors turned net sellers and pulled out $1.48 billion from Indian equities in October due to weakness in the global markets.
“As markets continued to remain at elevated levels and valuations high, FPI preferred to stay on the sidelines, adopt a wait-and-watch approach, and continue to book profits along the way," as per the report.
(With PTI Inputs)