Life Insurance Corp, one of the most active institutional investors, is believed to have pumped in Rs 99 crore to purchase shares of 6-7 bluechip firms, while mutual funds also turned heavy buyers with a net purchase of shares worth Rs 459 crore and debt securities worth Rs 1,215 crore during the day.
The hectic buying by domestic institutions, as also by some top-shot brokers in their proprietary accounts, was in sharp contrast to heavy selling of stocks by foreign portfolio investors, retail investors and even the NRIs.
The net outflow by FPIs in equities stood at Rs 528 crore, while in the debt market they were net sellers to the tune of a whopping Rs 2,310 crore.
Their overall net outflow at Rs 2,837 crore on Monday was highest for a single day since March 29, while their equities net outflow was also maximum in about a month since May 25.
As per the data from stock exchanges, all DIIs put together made a net inflow of Rs 724.06 crore in equities, which was more than the net outflow due to sell-off by FPIs -- thus helping the stock markets move higher.
However, the debt markets were not that lucky as sell-off by overseas investors there turned out to be higher.
The stock exchange data further showed that retail investors, while trading as clients of brokerage firms, were net sellers to the tune of about Rs 125 crore -- a figure much higher than their average daily figure.
The data shows a contrasting trend to the traditional
pattern of foreign investors being net buyers on a day when the benchmark stock market indices like Sensex and Nifty close with gains.
Marketmen said that the domestic institutions could have been pressed into hectic buying in select high-weightage stocks to counter the impact on index values due to heavy selling by foreign investors amid concerns relating to Rajan.
Stocks and rupee yesterday opened with an early morning plunge but equities bounced back to score a 241-point rally as Rexit jitters got blunted by a new wave of FDI reforms, hectic buying by institutions, talking-up by influential marketmen and easing Brexit worries.
Stock market benchmark Sensex plunged to as low as 26,438 points in pre-open trade between 0900-0915 hours, down nearly 200 points from its previous close, but early morning buying orders helped limit the opening loss at 178 points.
After touching a low of 26,447.88 in opening trade, the Sensex recovered sharply to scale an intra-day high of 26,885.49 points before finishing at 26,866.92, showing a gain of 241.01 points or 0.91 per cent.
As per the provisional data released by the stock exchanges for today's trade, the foreign investors were net buyers to the tune of Rs 485 crore, while domestic institutions made a net outflow of Rs 335 crore.
The retail investors trading as clients made a net purchase of Rs 23 crore, while proprietary accounts saw net sales of Rs 1.15 crore. The NRIs sold shares worth a net amount of Rs 89 lakh.
