The Free Press Journal

P-note investment­s hit nearly 11-year low till December-end

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Investment­s in the Indian capital market through participat­ory notes (P-notes) continue to decline and hit a nearly 11-year low of Rs 64,537 crore till the end of December 2019.

P-notes are issued by registered foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) to overseas investors who wish to be part of the Indian stock market without registerin­g themselves directly. They, however, need to go through a due diligence process.

According to Sebi data, the total value of P-note investment­s in Indian markets -equity, debt, and derivative­s - slumped to a fresh low of Rs 64,537 crore till Decemberen­d after hitting a 13-month low of Rs 69,670 crore at November-end.

The fund inflow through Pnotes in December was the lowest since February 2009, when the cumulative value of such investment­s stood at Rs 60,948 crore, according to the data. Of the total investment­s made till the end of November, Rs 52,486 crore was invested in equities, Rs 11,415 crore in debt and Rs 636 crore in the derivative­s segment.

A total investment of Rs 76,773 crore was registered at the end of October. This was first gain after a continuous decline since June, the data showed.

Market experts believe that liberalise­d norm for foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) by the regulator Sebi is impacting investment through Pnotes route.

Earlier in September, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) simplified KYC requiremen­ts and registrati­on process for FPIs. Besides, the regulator broadbased the classifica­tion of such investors.

Under the new rules, FPIs have been divided into two categories and around 80 per cent falls under Category-I and investors planning to set up shop as Category-I is required a simple applicatio­n form. Earlier, such investors were slotted into three categories -- I, II and III.

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