The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) is closely working with the RBI, DIPP's Joint Secretary Gopal Krishna told reporters here at a CII function.
At present, the government releases detail foreign direct investment inflows to India on a monthly basis, Krishna said.
"There is a very good data base on inward investment, pretty great amount of detail information is there. But such kind of data for outward investment is still missing. Data about outward investment is very sketchy," he said.
DIPP was working with a committee headed by RBI Deputy Governor Shyamala Gopinath regarding this. The committee has devised a format for detail collection of outward fund flows.
"RBI has devised a format and that will now be coming to us and filtering to us...now we can further analyse, exactly the way we analyse the inward investments," he said.
Krishna said the data is likely to be released on monthly basis from April. "I hope that it will start from April, than we release this on monthly basis like we release for inward investments," he added.
In the recent years, Tata's acquired British marquee Jaguar Land Rover, Bharti Airtel purchased significant stake in Bangladesh-based telecom firm Warid and Mahindra bought two Australian aerospace firmsKrishna said the data would be significantly useful for researchers, academicians and industry people as well.
According to the RBI, during the quarter July-September 2009, 1,127 proposals amounting to USD 4.8 billion (about Rs 22,440 crore) were cleared for investments in joint ventures and wholly-owned subsidiaries as against 1,180 proposals worth USD 5.6 billion (about Rs 26, 180 crore) during the corresponding period of the previous year.
As per a CII report, the US was the largest recipient of India's outbound mergers and acquisition investments. It was valued at USD 440 million in 2009.