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| What is the evidence for this? First, there is the entry into the market by some large public sector investors like Life Insurance Corporation and State Bank of India. Other insurance players, stuck with long-term cash, may be doing the same thing. On top of that, the mutual funds have increased the funds under their management. Many of them have floated new fund schemes and received an enthusiastic response from the retail investor/public. Once it has been raised for investment, the money has necessarily to be deployed in equities, which has translated into fresh buying stocks by fund managers. The combined effect of these developments has been to neutralise the selling by the FIIs, so much so that the Sensex has stayed where it was. |
| This signals a change in the Indian stock market, which has gained depth as different categories of institutional investors "" domestic and international, short- and long-term, etc "" have all become significant players. Given their different time horizons and objectives, some institutional players will be buying while others will be selling. This will be added to in some measure by the government deciding to allow charitable trusts to invest their corpus through the stock market, providing for another set of buyers who will enter the market, probably in stages. And even more money will come into the stock market in the coming months as the new pension scheme for government employees gets into full swing. At the same time, however, the stock market regulator has also proposed the re-birth of short selling, albeit with some restrictions. This will help create the counter-pressure required in a mostly bull market, and thereby contribute to market stability. |
| These are all positive developments. However, the fact remains that the FIIs still have an overwhelming presence in the Indian market, being the single largest category of investors after company promoters "" who usually do not play with their own holdings and therefore contribute little to trading volumes on the market. If the risks that some observers see in this FII dominance (the doomsday scenario envisages wholesale pull-out by the FIIs, thereby destabilising stock prices, currency valuations, liquidity in the system and much else) are to be minimised, then there is only one way to go: do more of what has been done already, so that domestic participants become the lead players on the market, even as the market remains accessible to all comers. |
First Published: Dec 27 2007 | 12:00 AM IST