Government has mopped up Rs 12,700 crore in the first half of the current fiscal, highest recorded in the past seven years despite volatile market conditions.
However, it has a long way to go to achieve the budgeted target of Rs 69,500 crore for the full fiscal.
"DoD has been able to do well despite adverse market conditions. Also, the general preference of overseas investors appears to be for fixed income instruments like government bonds and financial sector stocks," said a government official, adding that "DoD is having to make extra efforts to get foreign investors into PSU disinvestment programme".
The government has a pipeline of over a dozen PSUs for stake sale which includes RINL, NMDC, SAIL, Coal India, BHEL, OIL and ONGC, MMTC, Nalco and Hindustan Copper.
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Overall, officials maintain that there is a lot of interest in India which has been described as a bright spot by the IMF, officials said, adding that overseas roadshows usually generate lot of interest especially in infrastructure and banking sector.
Notwithstanding the preference of foreign investors for financial sector stocks, host of FIIs including Fidelity, HSBC, Goldman Sachs, Citi and Morgan Stanley have pumped in funds in PSU disinvestments, they said.
Private sector companies, which have a cumulative market capitalisation of 88 per cent, raised only Rs 4,950 crore through initial public offerings (IPOs).
Indian equity markets have been volatile amid slump in the Chinese market as well as the Greek crisis and fears of impending rate hike by the US Federal Reserve.
The BSE Sensex has dropped by over 6.4 per cent between April and September.