FDI Firms' Capital Hits Rs 5.96 Lakh Cr; Services Outperform Manufacturing

Foreign Direct Investment companies in India held a paid-up capital of nearly Rs 5.96 lakh crore during the 2024-25 fiscal year, accounting for over half of the total for such firms. While net sales growth moderated, profit after tax surged by 22.2%, supported by higher non-operating income. The services sector demonstrated resilience with stronger sales and a 29.2% profit growth, outperforming the manufacturing sector. The Reserve Bank of India's analysis also noted a decline in reliance on external funding and an increased focus on capital formation.

Key Points: FDI Paid-Up Capital Hits Rs 5.96 Lakh Crore in FY25: RBI

  • Capital base at Rs 5.96 lakh crore
  • Sales growth moderates to 8.7%
  • Services profit jumps 29.2%
  • Leverage stands at 25%
3 min read

FDI companies' paid-up capital hits Rs 5.96 lakh crore in 2024-25: RBI

RBI reports FDI companies' paid-up capital at Rs 5.96 lakh crore in 2024-25, with services sector showing stronger profit growth than manufacturing.

"The operating profit growth reduced to 10.7 per cent during 2024-25 from 22.1 per cent in the previous year - Reserve Bank of India"

New Delhi, April 22

Foreign Direct Investment companies' paid-up capital in India reached Rs 5,96,425 crore during the 2024-25 fiscal year. According to the Reserve Bank of India, this amount accounts for 51.9 per cent of the total PUC of FDI companies reported in the central bank's annual census of foreign liabilities and assets of Indian direct investment companies.

The RBI report, which analysed the audited annual accounts of 3,100 non-government non-financial companies, highlighted a significant concentration of foreign investment sources. Investors from Singapore, the USA, and Mauritius together accounted for more than half of the sample companies. Other major contributors to the Indian investment landscape included Japan, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom.

While the capital base remains substantial, the growth of net sales for these select FDI entities saw a slight moderation. The growth rate slowed to 8.7 per cent in 2024-25 from 9.4 per cent in the previous year.

This deceleration was particularly evident in the manufacturing sector, where sales growth dropped to 5.1 per cent from 6.8 per cent. In contrast, the services sector showed resilience as its sales growth marginally increased to 12.7 per cent.

"The operating profit growth reduced to 10.7 per cent during 2024-25 from 22.1 per cent in the previous year," the Reserve Bank of India stated in its release.

This decline in profit growth coincided with a rise in operating expenses, which climbed to 9.1 per cent from 7.7 per cent. The central bank attributed this uptick in costs primarily to higher manufacturing expenses and increased remuneration to employees.

Despite the pressure on operating margins, the bottom line for many of these firms improved. Profit after tax saw a 22.2 per cent increase during the period, a jump that was supported by higher non-operating income and lower interest expenses.

Within the broader industry trends, services sector companies outperformed their manufacturing counterparts by recording a post-tax profit growth of 29.2 per cent compared to 12.6 per cent in manufacturing.

"Leverage (measured in terms of debt-to-equity ratio) of the sample FDI companies stood at 25.0 per cent during 2024-25," the RBI release noted. This metric showed diverging trends across sectors, as leverage in the manufacturing sector moderated to 16.3 per cent while it increased to 23.6 per cent for services.

RBI further noted that the Interest Coverage Ratio (ICR) rose to 5.8 during the 2024-25 period. On the funding front, companies relied less on external sources, which fell to 42.6 per cent from 45.5 per cent, largely due to a decline in term loans from banks.

Meanwhile, the ratio of gross capital formation to total uses of funds increased to 45.3 per cent, signalling a continued focus on asset creation.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The numbers look good on paper, but the slowdown in manufacturing sales growth from 6.8% to 5.1% is a concern. We need to focus on 'Make in India' more aggressively to boost this sector. The services-resilience story is getting old.
R
Rohit P
Interesting to see Singapore, USA, and Mauritius as top sources. Hope this investment translates into more high-quality jobs here and not just profit booking. The rise in employee remuneration mentioned is a good step.
S
Sarah B
The data is a mixed bag. Operating profit growth halved, but PAT is up sharply due to non-operating income. This suggests core business profitability is under pressure from rising costs. Companies need to manage expenses better.
K
Karthik V
The increase in Gross Capital Formation to 45.3% is the most important figure here. It means companies are reinvesting in assets and capacity building in India. That's long-term thinking. Bahut badhiya!
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Nisha Z
While the headline number is huge, I respectfully think we should be cautious. The leverage in the services sector is increasing. High growth fueled by more debt can be risky. Hope RBI keeps a close watch.

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