Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) extended their buying streak in Indian equities in the new financial year, having bought shares worth Rs 24,939 crore on a net basis in the first half of May, National Securities Depository Ltd (NSDL) data showed on Monday.
This was the highest buy by FPIs in six months since November 2022. In fact, FPIs bought Indian equities in each of the nine sessions in the first half of May.
The foreign institutional investors (FIIs) had been net purchasers in March and April, largely due to US investment firm GQG Partners' $1.87 billion investment in four Adani Group companies and stable quarterly earnings.
The benchmark Nifty 50 jumped 1.85 per cent in the first half of May, as FPI inflows powered the rise in domestic equities.
The renewed interest from FPIs is also driven by India's stable macro economic indicators such as robust goods and services tax collections, slide in inflation, said two analysts.
What FPIS bought in May
After selling financial services shares worth Rs 29,993 crore in FY2023, FPIs have shown renewed interest in the sector, buying Rs 8,382 crore in May.
FPIs had bought Rs 7,690 crore in the sector in April.
"Earnings momentum continued for the banking sector in March quarter, and aided sentiment in the markets," said analysts at Motilal Oswal Financial Services in their interim review of the earnings season.
Automobile, oil and gas, healthcare, and fast moving consumer goods also witnessed buying in May, while information technology saw selling. Analysts said the turmoil in banking system in the US and softness in technology spends by clients in the US and Europe affected earnings of IT companies and triggering FPI selling in the sector.