Foreign portfolio investment (FPI) inflows into India could trip below USD 15 billion this fiscal amid continued global uncertainty, a Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BofA-ML) report says.
The global financial services major said: "We see a downside risk to our FY16 FPI equity inflow forecast of USD 15 billion." So far, the inflows stand at USD 1.4 billion.
The BofA-ML report said fresh equity inflows hinge on an expected earnings recovery in September although India's higher growth prospects and China volatility should limit outflows.
More From This Section
The benchmark BSE Sensex is currently hovering around 27,700. So far this fiscal, it has lost 555 points.
According to the global brokerage, RBI may need to inject liquidity through open market operations (OMO) in case capital inflows wear thin.
"We estimate that RBI will need to inject USD 45 billion to step up FY16 growth to 6 per cent (in old GDP series) from 5-5.5 per cent last year," it added.
Meanwhile, portfolio inflows are likely to swing on three event risks in September-October. First, whether Fed would hike rates; second, whether September earnings would stage a recovery and third, the Bihar poll outcome, the report said.