HomeNewsBusinessMarketsNo major outflows despite Trump tariffs and H-1B shock, bullish on FIIs' return, says Samir Arora
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MC EXCLUSIVE No major outflows despite Trump tariffs and H-1B shock, bullish on FIIs' return, says Samir Arora

FIIs may have pulled out over $15 billion from India this year, but Helios Capital’s Samir Arora believes the country’s resilience against global shocks and domestic tailwinds like GST-led consumption and financial strength could bring flows back

September 23, 2025 / 16:04 IST
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Samir Arora
Next leg of FII flows will depend on domestic triggers such as consumer revival from GST 2.0

FIIs have been net sellers in India so far this year, pulling out $15,074 million even as China, Japan and Taiwan emerged as their preferred destinations to ride the global AI trade. But Samir Arora, founder of Helios Capital, believes India has weathered global shocks better than its regional or emerging market peers, and the next leg of flows will depend on domestic triggers such as consumer revival from GST rationalisation and a stronger showing from financials once rate cuts kick in.

“From February-end, flows were still okay. We saw negative flows in January and February, but that was before this trend started at that time, people still preferred the US, thinking the tariff issue wouldn’t escalate. But in the last 2-3 months, two negative events hit India: the surprise 25 percent additional tariff, materially harsher than what others faced, and now this new H1-B issue. Still, if you look at FII flows in aggregate since February-end, I would say they are around plus-minus zero. We have managed to absorb two India-specific negatives better than our regional or EM peers. I remain okay with the view that FIIs will invest,” Arora told Moneycontrol.

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Globally, US equities remain dominant, accounting for about 65 percent of the world index. Yet, for the first time in years, ex-US markets are outperforming in dollar terms. While the US has gained 16-17 percent year-to-date, the MSCI World ex-US index has surged nearly 25 percent.