Image used for representational purposes. File

Image used for representational purposes. File
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) infused ₹22,615 crore into Indian equities, marking the highest monthly inflow in 17 months, driven by the interim India-U.S. trade deal, correction in domestic market valuations and robust third-quarter corporate earnings.

The latest buying follows three consecutive months of heavy selling. FPIs pulled out ₹35,962 crore in January, ₹22,611 crore in December and ₹3,765 crore in November, according to data from the depositories.

Overall, FPIs have withdrawn a net ₹1.66 lakh crore ($18.9 billion) from Indian equities in 2025, making it one of the worst periods for foreign flows. The outflows were triggered by volatile currency movements, global trade tensions, concerns over potential US tariffs and stretched equity valuations.

According to the data, FPIs invested ₹22,615 crore in February. This was the highest monthly inflow since September 2024, when they had invested ₹57,724 crore.

The inflow was driven by secondary market buying, signalling renewed foreign confidence post-2025 outflows, said Vinit Bolinjkar, Head of Research at Ventura.

Javed Khan, Senior Fundamental Analyst at Angel One Ltd, said three key catalysts supported the inflow. These included India-U.S. trade agreements and corrections in India’s market valuation. Additionally, Q3 FY26 earnings grew 14.7%, suggesting confidence in the growth narrative.

Echoing similar views, Varun Gupta, CEO of Groww Mutual Fund, attributed the renewed inflows to improving earnings momentum, moderation in valuations from peak levels and early signs of easing trade uncertainty, with India concluding multiple FTAs, including those with the EU and UK.

Sectorally, FPIs were aggressive buyers in financials and capital goods, while continuing to pare exposure to the IT sector. The segment saw outflows of ₹10,956 crore amid concerns over AI-led disruption.

“FPIs had sold heavily in IT stocks due to the Anthropic shock and continued weakness in the segment. However, they turned buyers in financial services and capital goods,” said V.K. Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Investments.

Looking ahead, Mr. Khan said March flows are expected to remain positive. Q4 earnings will determine whether 15% earnings growth in FY27 is achievable, while rupee stability below ₹91 to the dollar provides comfort on returns.

Vijayakumar said FPIs are likely to adopt a wait-and-watch approach before increasing exposure to emerging markets. However, improving GDP growth prospects and a healthy corporate earnings outlook for FY27 bode well for medium-term flows.

Meanwhile, the ongoing conflict in the Middle East has triggered a risk-on sentiment in financial markets. Its impact on crude prices and currency movements remains a key monitorable, he added.


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