"The FII (foreign institutional investors) inflows into the domestic markets is likely to come down to USD 18-20 billion in the next 12 months, which is half of the current inflows," Managing Director for equity research Neelkanth Mishra told reporters here.
He attributed this primarily to a possible slowdown in pumping in money by the SWFs.
SWFs are short on allocatable resources due to the fall in the crude oil prices, Mishra said.
Currently, the inflows are almost evenly split between debt and equities, (as there is a USD 25 billion cap on FIIs' holdings in government bonds, though there is a huge demand for more) and Mishra pointed to his in-house research which said around 40-50 per cent of the inflows into domestic equities come from SWFs.
It can be noted that oil prices have slid to a five-year low of USD 66-67 to a barrel. Since June, there has been a massive 35 per cent fall in the Indian basket of Brent crude. Many of the countries in the Middle East like the UAE and Oman have very active SWFs.