Hindustan Times (Jammu)

FPIs continue to dump equities, withdraw ₹7,400 cr this month

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NET OUTFLOW BY FPIS FROM EQUITIES THIS YEAR SO FAR HAS REACHED ₹2.25 LAKH CRORE -- A RECORD HIGH

NEW DELHI: Foreign investors continue to be cautious about the Indian equity market and have pulled out over ₹7,400 crore this month so far amid sustained strengthen­ing of the dollar and increasing concerns over a recession in the US. This comes following a net withdrawal of ₹50,203 crore from equities in June. While foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have slowed down their pace of selling, this does not indicate a change in trend as there has not been any significan­t improvemen­t in the underlying drivers, said Himanshu Srivastava, Associate Director - Manager Research, Morningsta­r India. There has been an exodus of foreign funds from the Indian equity market over the last nine months.

“Given the uncertaint­y in the forex market and the sustained strengthen­ing of the dollar, FPIs are unlikely to turn aggressive buyers in the Indian market and at higher levels they may again turn sellers,” said V K Vijayakuma­r, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Financial Services. Going forward, FPI flows will remain volatile in the emerging markets on account of rising geopolitic­al risks, rising inflation and tightening of monetary policy by central banks, Shrikant Chouhan, Head - Equity Research (Retail), Kotak Securities, said.

According to data with depositori­es, FPIs pulled out a net amount of ₹ 7,432 crore from Indian equities during July 1-15. While there have been sporadic net inflows by FPIs last week, the broader trend continues to be cautious, Srivastava added. FPIs withdrew a net ₹50,203 crore from equities in June. This was the highest net outflow since March 2020, when they had pulled out ₹61,973 crore. With the latest pull out, net outflow by FPIs from equities this year so far has reached around ₹2.25 lakh crore -- a record high. Before this, they withdrew ₹52,987 crore in the entire 2008, data showed.

According to Chouhan, Indian equities witnessed weakness as global inflation prints remained elevated, concerns of US recession increased, dollar index continued its sharp rally and Q1 results of large IT companies were weaker than expected. Rupee has touched the psychologi­cally key 80 per dollar mark briefly during the week, highlighti­ng the trouble RBI faces on controllin­g the currency, said Vijay Singhania, chairman of TradeSmart.Most central bankers are struggling in this currency war which is a collateral damage of the war in Europe, where the euro is now at par with the dollar, suggesting the Euro zone is staring at a deeper recession than the US, he added. Under such circumstan­ces, foreign investors withdrawin­g money comes as no surprise, Singhania said.

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