Foreign Investors Return Strong: Rs 14,610 Crore Flows into India in October 2025

Foreign Portfolio Investors break 3-month selling streak, backing India’s strong market recovery. Investing confidence returns amid global monetary easing.

Foreign Portfolio Investors FPIs have re-entered the Indian market in October 2025 and bought domestic equities worth a massive 14,610 crore after sales of over three months. The change in investor sentiment has occurred following continuous weekly sales of almost 77,000 crore from July to September. FPIs had cited reasons such as company earnings being barely better, the US Federal Reserve lowering interest rates, India-US tariff negotiations being optimistic, and domestic GST rationalisation as the most widely known causes.

In July, August, and September, FPIs pulled out Rs 17,700 crore, Rs 34,990 crore, and Rs 23,885 crore, respectively, amid heavy selling. On the other hand, the October inflow is a result of various factors, including the improved risk appetite and the drop in risk-on environment and mass grossing up and the drop-in inflation and expectations of a falling interest rate cycle, as observed by Himanshu Srivastava, Associate Director, and Manager Research, Morningstar Investment Research India Pvt. Ltd. Significant sectors are seeing strong corporate earnings, he adds. In contrast, other factors are contributing to better business conditions.

The Indian stock indices have shown resilience, and robust GDP numbers, and strong macroeconomic fundamentals have had a positive impact. The trade talks between India and the US also contribute to increasing market optimism. However, despite the recent gains, FPIs have withdrawn about Rs 1.4 lakh crore so far in 202%, suggesting their confidence has not yet been fully restored.

On the other hand, in the debt category, foreign investors have displayed a dichotomic behavior, with investments worth Rs 3,507 crore under the general limit and withdrawals of Rs 427 crore through the voluntary retention route in the previous month. The continuity of this good behavior depends on each of the following key variables, namely the continuation of macro-economic stability, a benign global backdrop, and sustained corporate performance:

The increase in foreign investment further underscores India’s rise as an investment destination, driven by progressive policy initiatives and a dynamic economic climate. The confidence-building initiatives have been possible thanks to the numerous policy changes and trade agreements pursued by the Government.

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