There has been a lot of media attention on the inflows and outflows of FIIs. These seem to drive some set of investors into buy and sell frenzies. This article evaluates the impact of FII Flows in Indian Equities.
Capital markets of any country are the sum total of all buy and sell actions of all its participants. There are 3 broad categories of participants in the markets.
Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) also called Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) form a significant investor category on the Indian markets. FII ownership forms 18.5% of the overall market cap (as of June 2022). Foreign investors’ investment in India is, as a part of their overall Emerging Market (EM) portfolio.
Emerging markets are generally developing countries with high growth rates. The growth rates of developed economies is generally subdued due to the nature of their mature economies. They seek and get higher returns from their investments in EMs. BRIC countries – Brazil, Russia, India, China are examples of emerging market economies.
The FII investment trends depend on a lot of factors, but primarily:
For instance, FII ownership in the BSE500 index had fallen from near record highs of 21.5% in December 2020 to a decade low of 18.4% by June 2022.
India has been able to mitigate the impact of high inflation, despite crude reaching $120/barrel. GDP numbers for Q1 of FY2023 were promising at 13.5% per the government released data. Economic recovery is looking strong across services and manufacturing. Based on this data, here is a look at how the FII flows have reversed in the last few months as the economic data in India and the overall narrative has reversed.
Calendar Year 2022 | Total(INR Crores) |
January | -28526 |
February | -38068 |
March | -50068 |
April | -22688 |
May | -36518 |
June | -51422 |
July | 1971 |
August | 56521 |
September ** | 5066 |
Total 2022 | -163732 |
The overall global economic slowdown is now on the cards. The US markets have also responded accordingly and there has been a spill over effect on other markets due to this. Quite a few analysts have expressed the opinion that the overall equity returns will be subdued from most major economies till early 2023. Given these conditions, the net FII flows in this calendar year remain negative, though the trend now seems to be reversing.
The FIIs being such a dominant force on the markets, sway the markets considerably when they invest or exit. An FII sell off can usher in a market correction. But this trend has changed in India, especially post pandemic. The retail participation in the markets has increased significantly. There were close to 1.4 crore new Demat accounts opened just in FY 2021! The retail participation through mutual funds, ULIPs, Hybrid funds, Balanced funds has all added up to approximately $14-15 billion in SIPs annually. These inflows are acting as a cushion against any major FII sell off.
For instance, the DII flows between April 2021 & August 2021 were $7.1 billion. Whereas, FII flows during the same period were just $2.4 billion. During this period, Nifty has gained close to 15%! In the last 3 decades starting from 1993, FIIs have invested a total of $190.8 billion in the Indian markets.
FY10-15 | $114.5 billion |
FY16-20 | $11 billion |
FY21 | $36.1 billion |
FY22 | -$17.1 billion |
FY23 (so far) | -$6 billion |
Despite the dull global outlook, India has stronger growth fundamentals compared to other EMs. The Indian domestic economy has shown strength and resilience. In the long term the Indian economy doing well has high confidence of investors and analysts alike. FII’s have also realized that the growth engine for the rest of this year would be India; till inflation catches up. We will be able to see continued inflows from FIIs in the near future.
Authored by Ram Kalyan Medury, Founder & CEO Jama Wealth. Also published on Financial Express
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