Domestic Investors Infuse Rs 18,520 Crore Amid FII Outflows in Volatile Week

Domestic institutional investors (DIIs) infused Rs 18,520 crore into equity markets during the week, cushioning the impact of sustained foreign institutional investor (FII) outflows. FIIs sold equities worth Rs 13,580 crore, though they turned net buyers in the final two sessions with inflows of Rs 1,520 crore. Market volatility was driven by rising crude oil prices, a weak rupee, geopolitical tensions in West Asia, and US-China diplomatic talks. The Nifty 50 fell 2.2% to 23,643.5, while the Sensex declined 2.7% to 75,238 during the week.

Key Points: DIIs Infuse Rs 18,520 Crore Amid FII Outflows

  • DIIs net buy Rs 18,520 crore in week
  • FIIs sell Rs 13,580 crore amid volatility
  • Nifty falls 2.2%, Sensex down 2.7%
  • Markets hit by crude, rupee, geopolitical tensions
2 min read

Domestic investors infuse Rs 18,520 crore amid FII outflows

Domestic institutional investors inject Rs 18,520 crore into markets as FIIs sell Rs 13,580 crore. Nifty falls 2.2% amid global uncertainties.

"Nifty started the week on a weak note and touched an intra-week low of 23,263 during Wednesday's session. - Analysts"

Mumbai, May 16

Domestic institutional investors continued to cushion domestic equity markets with net purchases worth Rs 18,520 crore during the week, even as foreign institutional investors remained net sellers amid elevated market volatility and persistent global uncertainties.

According to provisional exchange data, FIIs offloaded equities worth Rs 13,580 crore during the week, while DIIs remained net buyers.

In May, FIIs have sold equities worth Rs 24,660 crore, whereas DIIs have infused Rs 39,920 crore into domestic markets so far.

FIIs remained net sellers during the first three trading sessions of the week, with cumulative outflows of nearly Rs 15,100 crore.

However, foreign investors turned net buyers in the final two sessions, recording inflows of Rs 1,520 crore.

Meanwhile, DIIs remained net buyers in four out of the five trading sessions last week. They turned net sellers only on Friday, with outflows of Rs 1,960 crore.

Analysts said that markets witnessed heightened volatility during the week amid rising crude oil prices, a weakening rupee, ongoing geopolitical tensions in West Asia and uncertainty surrounding high-stakes US-China diplomatic talks in Beijing.

"Nifty started the week on a weak note and touched an intra-week low of 23,263 during Wednesday's session. Although the benchmark index witnessed a sharp rebound on Thursday, it failed to sustain momentum and eventually ended the week 2.2 per cent lower," they said.

The experts further noted that institutional flows are likely to remain sensitive to developments related to US-Iran tensions, crude oil price movement and the ongoing quarterly earnings season.

In addition, domestic equity benchmarks extended their losses for another week, with Nifty 50 falling 2.2 per cent or 532 points to settle at 23,643.5, while Sensex declined 2.7 per cent or over 2,000 points to close at 75,238 compared to the previous Friday's close.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Interesting dynamic. DIIs are providing a cushion but the global headwinds are strong. Oil prices and geopolitical tensions are real concerns. Let's see how Q4 earnings shape sentiment.
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Priya S
DIIs are putting in serious money, but we need to ask - are they buying at right valuations or just trying to prop up the market? Retail investors should be careful and not blindly follow. Investing wisely is key. 🤔
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Michael C
DII inflows of Rs 18,520 crore in a week is massive. Shows domestic confidence is high despite FII selling. But the 2.2% Nifty drop reminds us markets are still fragile. Patience required.
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Vikram M
The DII vs FII tug-of-war is becoming a regular story. What worries me more is the rupee weakening and oil prices - those hit common man hard. Markets aside, hope policymakers address these macro issues. 😕
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Emma D
DIIs clearly acting as a shock absorber. But long-term, we need FIIs to return for sustained rally. The US-China talks and US-Iran tensions are wildcards. Earnings season will be crucial.
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Ananya R
Honestly, this FII selling and DII buying pattern has been going on for months. Retail investors are confused - every time

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