Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have withdrawn more than Rs 4,500 crore from the Indian equity market last week amid fears of an aggressive rate hike by the US Federal Reserve
This follows a net investment of Rs 7,707 crore by FPIs during April 1-8 as a correction in the markets gave a good buying opportunity, according to data with depositories, PTI reported.
Before that, the overseas investors remained net sellers for six months to March 2022, pulling out a huge net amount of Rs 1.48 lakh crore from equities
This follows a net investment of Rs 7,707 crore by FPIs during April 1-8 as a correction in the markets gave a good buying opportunity, according to data with depositories, PTI reported.
Before that, the overseas investors remained net sellers for six months to March 2022, pulling out a huge net amount of Rs 1.48 lakh crore from equities
The sellout by FPIs was in line with the global rout in equity markets caused by the concerns about the FED hiking rates. In addition, the inflation numbers for India that came out last week were above expectation, and they further dampened sentiment. The RBI is also seen shifting its stance towards tightening, which could stress the equity markets,” Wright Research’s Srivastava said.
Manoj Trivedi, Co-founder, Jama Wealth, said the ongoing sell-off is not because of India-specific factors. It stems more out of a desire to move to safer havens, given the various uncertainties such as the ongoing war, rise in domestic (US) interest rates and an anticipated lowering of returns in dollar terms, because of a likely fall in Rupee value.
Given the fast changing global landscape, foreign flows into Indian equities could shift either way depending on how the underlying scenario changes, Morningstar India’s Srivastava said.
Last month US Fed hiked rates, for the first time since 2018, by a quarter percentage point, thus finally ending its ultra-easy pandemic-era monetary policy and indicating a series of more rate hikes this year. The war between Russia and Ukraine is still going on. Also, there is uncertainty around US Fed’s next move.