Overview
Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) have pared back exposure to Indian equities at the fastest pace on record, shedding $18.84 billion in local shares in just over three months. The wave of selling surpasses the prior full-year record set in 2025 and comes as a protracted energy disruption tied to the U.S.-Iran conflict compounds investor unease.
Capital flows and regional divergence
The exodus of foreign funds underlines a growing divergence between India and several North Asian markets. India’s $4.8 trillion equity market is particularly sensitive to swings in oil prices and to movements in the rupee. As geopolitical strains persist, global capital increasingly favors economies perceived to have clearer technology and semiconductor demand drivers, notably South Korea and Taiwan.
According to reported flows, South Korea and Taiwan attracted combined inflows of over $9 billion so far this month following a temporary ceasefire, while India experienced another $3 billion of outflows in the same period. Market participants point to the absence of a comparable AI or tech-hardware growth narrative in India as a factor leaving local indices at a disadvantage.
The divergence has had a material market impact: Indian equities have lost more than $600 billion in market value from last year’s peak.
Domestic buying cushions but does not reverse declines
Domestic investors have remained active. Local mutual funds have put $31 billion into the market this year, supported by record participation in monthly systematic investment plans (SIPs). That domestic demand has acted as a stabilizing force, yet it has not been enough to prevent the benchmark Nifty 50 from declining 8% year-to-date.
Valuation remains a central concern for many international desks. BofA Securities observed that even after the recent market correction, the Nifty 50 is still expensive relative to other emerging-market peers, a factor that has weighed on foreign investor sentiment.
Currency and policy pressures
The rupee has been operating near record lows, prompting intervention from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). The combination of currency weakness, elevated oil sensitivity and stretched valuations puts what market commentators call the "India Premium" to its most severe test in roughly a decade. Without a clear catalyst to draw foreign institutional capital back in, analysts expect India to continue lagging some regional counterparts.
Implications for sectors
- Energy and commodity-sensitive sectors face heightened scrutiny given the link between oil-price dynamics and market flows.
- Technology and semiconductor-linked markets in North Asia are attracting relative inflows at India’s expense.
- Financials and large-cap growth stocks in India are affected by valuation concerns and currency pressure.