Business Standard

Foreign investors turn bullish on primary market

For instance, FIIs invested $1.2 billion in the primary market in the fourth quarter, almost five times their investment in the corresponding quarter of FY14

Krishna Kant Mumbai
The past financial year was lacklustre for the primary equity market, but there are signs of a revival in FY16.

There has been a strong rebound in the net investment by foreign institutional investors (FIIs) in the primary market, with sequential and year-on-year growth in the last three quarters of FY15.

For instance, FIIs invested $1.2 billion in the primary market in the fourth quarter, almost five times their investment in the corresponding quarter of FY14.

A stable to rising rupee is aiding the trend, besides India's improving growth outlook. There seems to be a negative correlation between net inflows in the primary market and the rupee-dollar exchange rate (see charts below).

The correlation co-efficient is -0.24, which means every 100-basis-point (one per cent) rise in the rupee-dollar exchange rate (appreciation) leads to a 25-basis-point rise in FII inflows in the primary equity market. This should not be surprising; a rise in the value of the rupee allows FIIs to buy more dollars for every rupee when they repatriate their profits from India.

 

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First Published: Apr 03 2015 | 11:32 PM IST

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