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FII ownership of Indian shares hits 12-year low, dips below 16%

Foreign investors’ assets under custody in equity totalled Rs 71.08 lakh crore in October, down 8.8 percent — the sharpest fall since March 2020 — from Rs 77.96 lakh crore a month ago

November 08, 2024 / 12:36 IST
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The value of shares held by mutual funds stood at Rs 42.36 lakh crore with the value of stocks owned by domestic institutional investors (DIIs) pegged at Rs 76.80 lakh crore at the end of the September quarter

The share of foreign investors in NSE-listed companies dropped to 15.98 percent in October, the lowest in twelve years. Foreign investors’ assets under custody in equity totaled Rs 71.08 lakh crore in October, down 8.8 percent from Rs 77.96 lakh crore a month ago—the sharpest fall since March 2020, according to data from NSDL.

Meanwhile, the share of mutual funds hit a record high of 9.58 percent in October, up from 9.32 percent a month prior. The value of shares held by mutual funds stood at Rs 42.36 lakh crore in October. The total value of assets owned by DIIs is unavailable for October; however, September shareholding data from stock exchanges pegged their total holdings at Rs 76.80 lakh crore.

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The FII and mutual fund share is calculated by dividing October’s assets under custody (AUC) data, as reported by NSDL, by the total market cap of all NSE-listed firms based on the daily average for October.

As of the September quarter, DIIs’ stake reached a record 16.2 percent, up from 16.15 percent the previous quarter. FIIs also saw a slight increase in share, rising to 16.44 percent from 16.27 percent, driven by net inflows of Rs 97,408 crore—Rs 67,059 crore in the secondary market and Rs 30,349 crore in the primary market.