FPIs holdings in Q1 FY'17 rises to $311 bn: report

FPI holdings in BSE-200 index stood at $291 billion in the January-March quarter of 2016

FPIs holdings in Q1 FY'17 rises to $311 bn: report
Press Trust of India Mumbai
Last Updated : Sep 15 2016 | 4:08 PM IST
Ownership of foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) in the BSE-200 companies climbed nearly 7 per cent sequentially to $311 billion in the April-June quarter of 2016, data from Kotak Institutional Equities has revealed.

FPI holdings in BSE-200 index stood at $291 billion in the January-March quarter of 2016.

For the April-June quarter, FPI acquired equities worth $147 billion with major buying seen in sectors such as automobiles, banking and energy.

In percentage terms, FPI holdings in BSE-200 companies increased to 24.9 per cent, as against 24.5 per cent in the preceding quarter, the report said.

"FPI ownership (including American Depository Receipt and Global Depository Receipt) in the BSE-200 Index reached $311 bn in the June quarter compared to $291 bn in the March 2016 quarter," the report said.

Bharat Financial Inclusion, HDIL and Castrol India saw the highest increase in holdings by FPIs, while J&K Bank, Ipca Laboratories and United Breweries saw the maximum decline in such ownership, during the first quarter of the current financial year.

While the overseas investors put their money into automobiles and banking stocks, there were selling in the pharmaceuticals sector.

On the other hand, domestic institutional investors increased their stake in pharmaceuticals sector and sold stocks in automobiles and cement sectors.

"DII holdings in BSE-200 companies increased to 11.4 per cent in the June quarter from 11.1 per cent at the end of the previous quarter," Kotak said.

Banking Financial and Insurance players upped their stakes mostly in NHPC, Tata Communications, and Indraprastha Gas. They decreased their holdings in Ambuja Cement, Axis Bank and Asian Paints.

Mutual Funds increased their ownership the most in Castrol India, Ipca Laboratories and United Breweries. Sanofi India, Kaveri Seed and Vedanta saw the highest decline in stake by the fund houses.

According to the report, FPIs were overweight on banking and technology and underweight on consumers and industrial sectors.
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First Published: Sep 15 2016 | 3:48 PM IST

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