Business Standard

FIIS, MFS join Street party

- SUNDAR SETHURAMAN

The Indian markets are staring at fresh all-time highs, even as foreign and domestic investors have joined forces, following the surprise ratecut announceme­nt by the government last month. The benchmark Sensex and Nifty had gained more than 10 per cent since September 19, 2019, when they had ended at seven-month lows.

During this period, foreign institutio­nal investors (FIIS) have pumped in nearly ~17,000 crore, while mutual funds (MFS) have been net buyers to the tune of ~9,000 crore. Currently, the Sensex is only 1 per cent away from its record high of 40,268 made in early June. Another 2 per cent gain in the Nifty could see the 50share index surpass its previous record of 12,089 logged on June 3. While buying by MFS has more or less been a permanent feature in the past few years, it is fairly uncommon for the institutio­nal investors to remain net buyers in a single calendar month — as witnessed during September and October. Market players say overseas investors turning positive are a big sentiment booster, even though the extent of buying hasn’t been robust.

Andrew Holland, chief executive officer (CEO), Avendus Capital Alternate Strategies, said the government’s decision to cut corporate taxes has helped revive foreign institutio­nal investment flows. Also, expectatio­ns of further easing of taxes, coupled with improvemen­t in the global risk sentiment, has helped, he added.

“Risky assets have been doing well amid progress in the Us-china trade talks and Brexit. The conditions for global risk on trade have turned favourable,” said Holland.

Jyotivardh­an Jaipuria, founder and managing director, Valentis Advisors, said, “The valuations were reasonable. With corporate tax cuts, the government has sent a clear message it was listening to the grievances of investors.”

The equity markets went through turbulence in July and August amid sharp pullback by overseas investors. The combined selling during the two months was nearly ~30,000 crore. The selling was attributed to disappoint­ment from the Union Budget and pessimism triggered by slowing economic growth — both domestical­ly and globally.

In the past two months, a little over a third of the FII outflows have been reversed. Many believe a sustained revival in overseas flows will require the easing of global and domestic headwinds. “Apart from the global environmen­t turning positive, some macro indicators like auto sales volumes need to bottom out,” said Rajat Rajgarhia, Ceo-institutio­nal Equities, Motilal Oswal. “Moreover, hopes of further reforms in India have kept investors excited,” he added.

Analysts say a rate in the dividend distributi­on tax and buyback tax could fuel further buying by FIIS.

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