Business Standard

IS THERE CORRELATIO­N BETWEEN FLOWS AND RETURNS?

- SAMIE MODAK

That markets do well when overseas inflows go up and correct when foreign institutio­nal investors (FIIs) press the sell button is a popular adage heard on the Street. However, an analysis of net institutio­nal investor inflows and market returns shows it is more than just net inflows that drive the market. For instance, so far in 2017, net inflows of close to $3 billion have come in but the markets have climbed 11.2 per cent, in contrast to 2014, when the markets got net inflows of just $629 million but the Sensex soared 30 per cent. While the flows are important, sentiment is a bigger factor than liquidity, says a report by Kotak Institutio­nal Equities. For instance, if tomorrow the US Fed cuts the interest rates by 100 basis points, stocks will go up sharply without any meaningful inflows. There is no correlatio­n between institutio­nal activity and market returns, says the brokerage as technicall­y every secondary market trade includes selling and buying, resulting in zero net flow. Actual “liquidity” is the “prevalent sentiment of the market, which is based on expectatio­ns about either improvemen­t or deteriorat­ion in fundamenta­ls (primarily earnings) or continuati­on of prevalent trends,” the note says. “We can only hope that the current excitement about the Indian market, especially the midcap and small-cap, stocks reflects the market’s confidence in a sharp recovery in economic activity and earnings and not simply expectatio­ns that the market and underlying stocks will deliver positive returns simply based on ‘liquidity’ and increased ‘participat­ion’ by retail investors into the market,” the note adds.

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