P-notes are issued by registered foreign portfolio investors to overseas investors who wish to be part of the Indian stock market without registering themselves directly
Apart from exports, imports too, tumbled 58.7% in April, with all major import products seeing a contraction.
The inflow comes following a net withdrawal of Rs 6,883 crore in April and Rs 61,973 crore in March on fears of a coronavirus-induced global recession
Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) bought net assets worth $6.3 billion in three months ended December 2019
Equities saw a net outflow of Rs 6,883 crore in April and Rs 61,973 crore in March, hit by coronavirus-induced disruptions.
This is the fourth such communication from the market regulator to the designated depository participants/custodians in a month
In March, FPIs had withdrawn a record amount of over Rs 1.1 trillion on a net basis, while Rs 15,403 crore was pulled out in April from the domestic capital markets (both equity and debt)
Between April 1-24, foreign portfolio investors (FPI) pulled out a net sum of Rs 6,822 crore from equities and Rs 3,525 crore from the debt segment, depositories data showed
Move follows MSCI step, inflows may rise by $2 billion
Nearly 80 per cent of FPIs coming from Mauritius are currently classified as Category-II
In the last three trading sessions, FPIs scooped shares worth more than Rs 4,000 crore, spurring a 13 per cent rally in the market
The share of such funds among overall foreign holdings had risen over the last 18 months
Analysts say the market bloodbath is worse than in 2008. Last week, investor sentiment was crushed with the Sensex dropping as much as 17%
Foreign outflows could accelerate further if oil prices stay low
As manufacturing in China recovers, so will the demand for raw materials
ETFs, which invest in Hong Kong-listed Chinese stocks, saw outflows of nearly $1.4 billion - most among Ems
From Centre considering to issue G-secs with no limit for FPIs to more allotment for pensions that salaries in defence budget, here are top business headlines of the day
This comes after the central bank hiked the short-term investment limit for FPIs in both corporate and government debt, last week, to 30 per cent from 20 per cent
FPIs will also be allowed to invest in exchange traded funds or ETFs that invest only in debt instruments, the RBI said.
The short-term investment limit has now been increased from 20 per cent to 30 per cent in both the cases, the RBI said in a circular