Foreign Investors Eye India's 2026 Comeback, But AI Gap Looms Large

Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs), after record outflows of $17.5 billion in 2025, are poised for a potential comeback in Indian equities in 2026, supported by strong earnings projections and a stable macroeconomic environment. However, a key risk is India's positioning as primarily an AI user rather than a producer, which may sustain a preference for other emerging markets with direct AI exposure. This divergence could lead to uneven performance, favoring domestic-cycle sectors like banks and infrastructure while potentially neglecting traditional exporters and tech services lacking AI stories. The report highlights that while mutual fund inflows may remain steady, the global capital shift towards AI-centric value chains presents a structural challenge for India's market appeal.

Key Points: FPI Comeback in India 2026? AI Exposure a Key Risk

  • Record FPI outflows in 2025
  • Supportive 2026 macro & earnings outlook
  • India's AI producer gap vs global demand
  • Sector divergence expected
3 min read

Foreign investors to stage comeback in Indian equities in 2026; AI exposure gap may pose risk

After record 2025 outflows, foreign investors may return to Indian equities in 2026, drawn by earnings & macro stability. But an AI exposure gap poses a risk.

"India, despite strong domestic growth, remains largely an AI user rather than an AI producer at scale. - Antique Stock Broking Report"

New Delhi, January 3

After a bruising 2025 for overseas investors, foreign portfolio investors could be staging a comeback in Indian equities in 2026. Market strategists say the conditions that triggered record outflows last year are easing while earnings visibility, valuations, and macro stability are turning supportive.

In its report titled "India Equity Strategy 2026", Antique Stock Broking Limited said the FPI equity outflow in the Calendar Year 2025 was highest on absolute basis at USD 17.5 bn (or 0.3% of market cap). We believe that CY26 could see a revival as the six-month FPI equity flow as a percentage of market cap is at (-)1 Standard Deviation; Low FPI ownership in India despite strong earnings growth and macro outlook; Reasonable equity valuation, relative to other emerging and developed markets; and Low market beta.

However, preference towards the Artificial Intelligence (AI) exposed emerging market countries relative to India may sustain in CY26 given relatively reasonable valuation is a key risk. Mutual fund equity inflow may sustain given steady SIP flow (with increasing preference towards equity), EPFO/ NPS flow, low domestic equity ownership, and superior equity return profile relative to other asset class, the report said.

FPIs pulled out about USD 17.5 billion from Indian equities in 2025, the highest annual outflow on record in absolute terms. The selling reflected weak earnings momentum, global risk aversion, and better relative opportunities in AI-heavy markets, the report highlighted.

Corporate earnings are expected to re-accelerate sharply. Nifty earnings are projected to grow at around 16% CAGR over FY26-FY28, compared with roughly 7% over the previous two years.

India's macro backdrop is unusually supportive. Real GDP growth is expected to remain around 7.5%, inflation is forecast to stay benign, and the current account deficit is projected below 1% of GDP. A stable currency outlook and easing global monetary conditions reduce one of the biggest risks FPIs worry about sudden macro shocks.

Highlighting the exposure of the global investors towards AI, the report said they are increasingly allocating capital to markets and companies with direct AI exposure including semiconductors, advanced hardware, cloud infrastructure, and AI-native platforms.

The US, Taiwan, and parts of East Asia dominate these value chains. India, despite strong domestic growth, remains largely an AI user rather than an AI producer at scale. This creates a mismatch between where global capital wants exposure and where India's strengths lie.

The report further noted that the AI risk does not hit all Indian sectors equally.

Capital-intensive, domestic-cycle sectors such as banks, infrastructure, and consumption may continue to perform locally.

But technology services, traditional exporters, and index-heavy sectors could face relative neglect if they lack credible AI monetisation stories. This may widen sectoral divergence within Indian markets.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone working in tech, this hits home. Indian IT services giants are scrambling to rebrand as AI companies, but the core value creation is happening elsewhere. We need more venture capital flowing into deep-tech AI startups here, not just service-based models.
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Vikram M
Our macro fundamentals are rock solid - 7.5% growth, low inflation, stable currency. That's what will bring the money back. FPIs chase stability and growth, which India offers in spades. The AI hype will cool down, but our domestic consumption story is permanent. Bullish on banks and infra stocks.
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Rohit P
Respectfully, I think the report underestimates Indian ingenuity. We might not make the semiconductors today, but we are world leaders in AI software talent and implementation. Companies like Tata are investing in fabs. The gap will close faster than they think. Jai Hind!
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Priya S
The steady SIP flows from retail investors are the real backbone of our market now. Even if foreign money is fickle, the common man's savings through mutual funds are providing stability. That's a powerful shift in the market structure.
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Michael C
Interesting read. From a global investor's perspective, the report is correct. The allocation decision is simple: put money in Taiwan for semiconductor exposure and India for domestic consumption growth. The risk is sectoral divergence within Nifty, as mentioned. Need to be very stock-specific in 2026.

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