Sun, 17 May 2026
Business India News Updated May 17, 2026 · 16:26

FPIs Pull Out Rs 13,740 Crore From Indian Markets Amid West Asia Tensions

Foreign portfolio investors pulled out Rs 13,740.89 crore from Indian markets during the week ended May 15, driven by escalating West Asia tensions and rising crude oil prices. The outflow was concentrated in equities, which saw Rs 12,817.11 crore in withdrawals, while debt segments also experienced selling. The rupee's weakening against the US dollar further reduced returns for foreign investors, contributing to the cautious sentiment. Market experts expect FPI flows to remain volatile in the near term due to global uncertainties and currency fluctuations.

FPIs pull out Rs 13,740 crore from Indian markets amid West Asia tensions, rising crude prices

New Delhi, May 17

Foreign portfolio investors remained net sellers in the Indian markets during the week ended May 15, pulling out Rs 13,740.89 crore across segments, according to data from the National Securities Depository Limited. The sustained outflows reflect cautious global investor sentiment amid escalating geopolitical tensions in West Asia, rising crude oil prices, and concerns over the weakening rupee.

The selling pressure was largely concentrated in equities, where FPIs withdrew Rs 12,817.11 crore during the week. Market experts believe foreign investors are turning risk-averse as the ongoing conflict in West Asia continues to disrupt global energy markets and increase uncertainty across emerging economies.

India, being a major crude oil importer, remains vulnerable to any sharp rise in global oil prices. Higher crude prices are expected to widen the country's trade deficit and put additional pressure on the rupee, making Indian assets relatively less attractive for foreign investors.

The rupee's weakening trend against the US dollar has also contributed to the cautious approach adopted by overseas investors. A depreciating currency reduces returns for FPIs in dollar terms, often triggering capital outflows from emerging markets like India.

Debt segments too witnessed outflows during the week. Debt-VRR recorded notable selling activity, while hybrid instruments also saw withdrawals, indicating broad-based caution among global funds.

The week began on a weak note with FPIs recording net outflows of Rs 1,131.77 crore on May 11. Selling intensified sharply on May 12, when foreign investors pulled out Rs 7,545.99 crore, marking the steepest single-day outflow during the week.

Although FPIs briefly turned buyers on May 13 with inflows of Rs 346.37 crore, the recovery remained short-lived as selling pressure resumed in subsequent sessions. On the final trading day of the week, FPIs infused Rs 1,111.53 crore into equities, helping limit overall losses.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently urged citizens to avoid excessive buying of gold and silver and instead support financial stability measures aimed at strengthening the rupee and reducing pressure on imports.

According to market experts, global uncertainties, elevated crude oil prices, and currency volatility are likely to keep FPI flows volatile in the near term.

— ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya M
The PM's advice about gold is interesting, but many families see it as an investment safety net. When FPIs flee and rupee tanks, gold prices shoot up. It's a vicious cycle. We need to strengthen our domestic manufacturing and reduce crude dependency so external shocks don't hit us so hard. Policy consistency matters.
V
Vikram R
FPIs have short memories. They sold during Covid too, and then came back in record numbers. India is a bright spot in global economy despite crude volatility. The real concern should be rupee depreciation and trade deficit - that's where fiscal discipline matters. Hope RBI continues smart interventions.
S
Sarah J
As someone following Indian markets from abroad, these outflows are temporary. West Asia tensions won't last forever, and once crude stabilizes, FPIs will return. However, India needs to address infrastructure bottlenecks to attract sustained foreign investment. Make in India needs real implementation, not just slogans.
A
Arjun K
Rs 13,740 crore is not small change, but in context of our $4 trillion market, it's manageable. The real pain is for retail investors who panic and sell in fear. My advice: SIP chalte raho! Dollar cost averaging works. These FPI moves create opportunities for patient investors. Bas patience chahiye.
N
Nisha D
Every time global uncertainty rises, India gets hit disproportionately because of our oil import dependence. This should be a wake-up call to accelerate renewable energy adoption. More solar, wind, and nuclear means less vulnerability to crude shocks. The government's green push is right, but implementation needs pace. 🌞

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