November 25, 2020
1 min read

Finance, Banking sectors garner most FPI investment in Nov

Foreign Portfolio Investments (FPI) have been bullish on the Indian equities off late and a significant portion of those investments are going into finance and banking stocks.

Financial services stocks attracted a net investment of Rs 16,389 crore during the first two weeks of November, with banks receiving Rs 11,519 crore out of it while other financial stocks received net investment of Rs 4,870 crore, as per NSDL data.

Capital goods, consumer durables, and oil and gas stocks followed the financial stocks in terms of FPI inflow with Rs 1,709 crore, Rs 1,532 crore and Rs 1,289 crore during the first half of November.

During November 1-15, 2020, FPIs made a net investment of Rs 29,436 crore into equities in India. So far, during the month, net FPI inflow has surged to Rs 53,167 crore.

FPIs made a return in October, after foreign investors made a pullout in September.

This trend is the likely to continue at least in the near term according to analysts, with high liquidity in the market post the measures announced by governments and central banks globally.

Experts noted that investors are looking for yield across the world and India provides them an opportunity where the cost of capital is low and can provide relatively higher growth over the long term.

A report by Kotak Institutional Equities showed that the September 2020 quarter witnessed Rs 46,900 crore of buying by FPIs. FPI holding (including ADR and GDR) in the BSE-200 Index increased to $415 billion in the September 2020 quarter from $360 billion at the end of the June 2020 quarter.

“FPI ownership in the BSE-200 Index stood at 23.3 per cent in September 2020. FPIs were net buyers in banks, diversified financials, IT services and oil, gas and consumable fuels’ sectors. DIIs [Domestic Institutional Investors] holding in the BSE-200 Index declined to 13.6 per cent in the September quarter from 14 per cent at the end of the June 2020 quarter,” it said.

DIIs, however, sold IT services, oil, gas and consumable fuels and pharmaceuticals sectors.

Currently too, DIIs have been on a selling spree and have been net seller off late, contrary to the investments by foreign investors.

Also Read: Centre to boost jobs, infra and rural economy with stimulus 3.0

Previous Story

India Daily Digital – November 25, 2020 – Tamil Nadu Braces For Cyclone Nivar

Next Story

McGregor might have money, but does he have a legacy?

Latest from Business

Samsung Unveils AI Revolution in Galaxy Series

While Samsung did not share the detailed product lineup, Galaxy S25 flagship smartphones, including a new slim model, are expected to be unveiled at the upcoming event…reports Asian Lite News Samsung Electronics

Retail Auto Sales Defy Challenges

Internal combustion engine two-wheelers faced challenges such as financial constraints and increasing competition from electric vehicles…reports Asian Lite News Retail automobile sales in India increased by 9.1% in 2024, reaching 2.61 crore

Mulk, Patil Groups Unveil Virtual Hospital   

Mulk International and DY Patil Group Launch Regional First Virtual Hospital with AED 100M Investment and more than 20,000 doctors on board. The new Initiative introduces Mulk Med Virtual Hospitals ecosystem across
Go toTop