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India's capital inflows hit 20-month high in August

September 05, 2022 00:00:00


NEW DELHI, Sept 4 (NDTV): Foreign investors have pumped in a little over Rs 512 billion into the Indian equity markets in August, making it the highest inflow in 20 months, amid improving risk sentiment and stabilisation in oil prices.

This comes following a net investment of nearly Rs 50 billion by Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) in July, data with depositories showed.

FPIs had turned buyers for the first time in July after nine straight months of massive net outflows, which started in October last year. Between October 2021 till June 2022, they withdrew Rs 2.46 lakh crore from the Indian equity markets.

India will continue to attract FPI flows this month too, although at a slower pace as compared to August, given continued rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve along with quantitative tightening, said Manish Jeloka, Co-head of Products and Solutions, Sanctum Wealth.

Arpit Jain, Joint Managing Director at Arihant Capital Markets, said inflation, dollar prices and interest rate will dictate FPI flows.

According to data with depositories, FPIs pumped in a net amount of Rs 512.04 billion into Indian equities during August. This was the highest investment made by foreign investors since December 2020, when they had infused a net Rs 620.16 billion in equities.

"Foreign investors started pumping in money into emerging markets as interest rates curve flattened and oil prices stabilised. Currency markets gained sanity and commodity prices fell as China's growth and financial market took a hit," said Vijay Singhania, chairman of TradeSmart.

Jain said correction in Indian equities, and falling oil and commodity prices, especially that of steel and aluminum, are the major reasons for FPIs buying despite a strong dollar and rising bond yields.


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