FII Ownership Plunges to 14-Year Low of 14.7% as DIIs Step In as Key Buyers

Foreign Institutional Investor ownership in Indian equities has fallen to 14.7%, its lowest since June 2012, as per a JM Financial report. Domestic Institutional Investors have stepped in strongly, raising their ownership to a record 18.9%. The report highlights a major sectoral shift, with FIIs exiting IT, BFSI, and FMCG while moving into communication services and healthcare. Key stocks like KPIT Technologies and Axis Bank saw heavy FII selling, while 360 ONE and GE Vernova T&D saw increased stakes.

Key Points: FII Ownership Hits 14-Year Low; DIIs Rise to 18.9%

  • FII ownership hits 14-year low at 14.7%
  • DII ownership rises to record 18.9%
  • DIIs increased stakes in 39 of 41 Nifty stocks where FIIs sold
  • IT, BFSI, and FMCG sectors see heaviest outflows
3 min read

FII ownership hits 14-year low to 14.7%; DII cushions Indian markets with 18.9% rise: Report

FII ownership in Indian equities falls to 14.7%, a 14-year low, while DII ownership rises to 18.9%. Report highlights sectoral shifts and key stocks.

"The 12-month FII flow data reveals a market where selling has been the dominant theme, with 10 out of 16 sectors recording net outflows over the period. - JM Financial Report"

New Delhi, May 9

Foreign Institutional Investor ownership as a percentage of total Indian equities has fallen from 19.9 per cent in April 2016 to 14.7 per cent in April 2026, marking its lowest level since June 2012, according to JM Financial's Fundamental Research report.

However, as per the report, domestic Institutional Investor (DII) ownership has concurrently risen over the years, reaching 18.9 per cent. This shift highlighted a significant transformation in the market's holding structure as domestic mutual funds reached a record-high share of domestic equity holdings, a trend fuelled by consistent Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) inflows.

In what the report characterised as a near-perfect counter-absorption, DIIs increased their stake in 39 out of 41 Nifty stocks where FIIs sold. This movement indicated that domestic institutions were acting as a systematic buyer of every FII exit. The breadth of this retreat is reflected in the fact that over the past three years, 41 out of 50 Nifty-50 stocks saw net FII selling, signaling a macro-level decision to reduce India allocation.

"The 12-month FII flow data reveals a market where selling has been the dominant theme, with 10 out of 16 sectors recording net outflows over the period. The bleeding is most severe in IT (-USD 9,222 mn), BFSI (-USD 6,056 mn) and FMCG (-USD 3,744 mn)--three sectors that collectively account for a disproportionate share of Nifty weightage, explaining why index-level FII ownership has been declining steadily," the report said.

The JMFS report noted that March 2026 stood out as a particularly brutal month, with the Banking, Financial Services, and Insurance (BFSI) sector alone seeing USD 6,488 million of outflows. Furthermore, the IT sector experienced persistent outflows across almost every single month with no meaningful recovery month recorded during the period.

"The sectoral shift is clear: FIIs are moving toward earnings-resilient, globally comparable sectors (Communication Services, Healthcare) and away from domestic consumption, commodities, and rate-sensitive financials," the report mentioned.

Despite the general exits from consumption and financials, steady inflows into Capital Goods (+USD 2,894 million) suggested continued FII conviction in the manufacturing and infrastructure cycle. Telecom also recorded a net positive inflow of USD 2,914 million despite some weak months. In April 2026 specifically, the Power sector clocked FII inflows of USD 584 million, followed by Capital Goods at USD 455 million and metals at USD 126 million.

"Notable companies experiencing high FII selling by percentage change include KPIT Technologies (-12.9%), Axis Bank (-11.7%), and Patanjali Foods (-10.9%). Conversely, FIIs increased stakes selectively in companies like 360 ONE (+22.8%), GE Vernova T&D (+17.8%), and One 97 (+7.9%)," the report highlighted.

The report emphasised that some of the strongest earnings per share compounders are witnessing the heaviest FII selling, indicating that these exits are not driven solely by earnings growth.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
This is a very significant shift. FIIs reducing stake in IT and BFSI makes sense given global uncertainties, but I'm surprised they are selling FMCG too. Indians are still consuming, right? 🤔 But the silver lining is that domestic institutions are buying. That shows confidence in our own economy. SIPs are literally building our nation's wealth one installment at a time. 📈
V
Vikram M
The data doesn't lie. FIIs are selling heavily but the market hasn't crashed because DIIs are absorbing. However, one must ask: is this a structural shift or a temporary trend? I think it's both. India's long-term story remains intact, but short-term volatility could spike. My worry is if DIIs run out of buying power in a prolonged sell-off. Then we'll see real pain. Hope the RBI and government keep macros strong. 🇮🇳
J
James A
Interesting read. From a global perspective, FIIs are rotating out of India to other emerging markets or safer havens given the uncertainty around US interest rates and geopolitical tensions. But the fact that Indian DIIs are buying so consistently is impressive. It shows the depth of domestic capital markets now. I wonder how long this trend will last—if global risk appetite returns, FIIs will probably pile back in. For now, it's a buyer's market for quality stocks.
S
Siddharth J
KPIT, Axis Bank, Patanjali Foods selling so much? That's surprising. BFSI outflows of $6.5 billion in March alone is massive. Feels like FIIs have lost faith in our financials, but DIIs are buying them. Let's hope the domestic institutions have done their homework better than foreign money. The focus on capital goods and telecom is interesting—manufacturing and digital infrastructure are the future. Time to check my portfolio allocation to these sectors! 👍

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50