Utländska institutionella investerare sålde indiska aktier för 1,14 biljoner rupier i mars

Utländska institutionella investerare sålde inhemska aktier till ett värde av 113 810 crore rupier i mars 2026, vilket fortsätter deras försäljning mitt under kriget mellan Iran och Israel. Utflödet hittills i år har nått 127 157 crore rupier.

Utländska institutionella investerare (FII) fortsatte sin avyttring från indiska aktier i mars 2026 och sålde aktier värda 113 810 crore rupier, enligt data från The Economic Times. Denna siffra, ungefär 1,14 biljoner rupier, markerar en fortsättning på de säljtrender som observerats tidigare under året, vilka påverkats av det pågående kriget mellan Iran och Israel. I slutet av mars uppgick de kumulativa utflödena för 2026 till 127 157 crore rupier. Försäljningen återspeglar bredare påfrestningar på de indiska marknaderna på grund av geopolitiska spänningar, även om inhemska institutionella investerare delvis har motverkat effekten under de senaste sessionerna. Marknadsaktörer noterade att FII, även kallade FPI i vissa sammanhang, har varit nettosäljare mitt under den globala osäkerheten. Inga specifika sektorer eller aktier lyftes fram i den omedelbara dataredovisningen, men trenden understryker volatiliteten på tillväxtmarknader som Indien.

Relaterade artiklar

Anxious traders at Bombay Stock Exchange watch falling Indian stocks and rising oil prices amid Middle East tensions.
Bild genererad av AI

Indian stocks face ongoing pressure from Middle East tensions

Rapporterad av AI Bild genererad av AI

Following initial market shocks from West Asia conflict, Indian equities saw major foreign investor outflows and remain volatile amid rising oil prices. FPIs withdrew $751.4 million on March 2—the largest daily pullout in four months—with markets resuming post-Holi holiday on March 4 under continued pressure.

Foreign institutional investors have sold Indian shares worth more than Rs 2 lakh crore so far in 2026, marking their third straight month as net sellers amid ongoing geopolitical tensions.

Rapporterad av AI

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) poured Rs 22,615 crore into Indian stocks during February, showing strong buying interest. However, escalating geopolitical tensions between Iran and Israel have raised concerns about the sustainability of this trend. Experts suggest that FIIs might pause new investments to monitor the situation.

Vanguard Funds, a top foreign institutional investor in India, saw its equity holdings in 48 BSE-listed companies reach Rs 69,100 crore as of February 27, 2026. This marks a 60% increase from Rs 43,047 crore in the March quarter, driven by strong performances in several stocks during FY26. The portfolio includes new investments in eight companies from the December 2025 quarter.

Rapporterad av AI

Domestic institutional investors raised their holdings in several large-cap Indian companies during the March 2026 quarter. Buying focused on financial, technology, telecom and industrial names even as share prices fell sharply.

India's banking system liquidity surplus has narrowed to ₹75,483 crore amid advance tax outflows of Rs 2 lakh crore and forex market interventions. Money market rates rose as a result, leading the Reserve Bank of India to conduct a repo operation. Economists estimate the RBI sold over $15 billion to support the rupee.

Rapporterad av AI

Indian benchmark indices Sensex and Nifty closed nearly 6% higher for the week, snapping a six-week losing streak after a ceasefire between the US and Iran. Both indices rose 1.2% on Friday. Investors adopted a risk-on approach amid reduced volatility.

 

 

 

Denna webbplats använder cookies

Vi använder cookies för analys för att förbättra vår webbplats. Läs vår integritetspolicy för mer information.
Avböj