FIIs turn net buyers, pump ₹4,670 crore into Indian markets this week

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FIIs turn net buyers, pump ₹4,670 crore into Indian markets this week

Synopsis

FIIs flipped to net buyers this week with ₹4,670 crore in purchases — a notable reversal after $3 billion in net selling in June. Paired with SIP flows hitting a three-month high of ₹31,780 crore, domestic confidence is holding firm even as secondary markets have bled $49.3 billion in FII outflows over the past year.

Key Takeaways

FIIs turned net buyers this week, purchasing ₹4,670 crore in Indian equity markets based on provisional exchange data.
DIIs also remained net buyers, adding ₹8,280 crore during the same period.
Mutual fund SIP contributions hit a three-month high of ₹31,780 crore in June, up 16.5% year-on-year.
Nifty50 swung between 24,530 and 23,805 last week before closing near 24,200 , down 0.3% .
Over the past 12 months , FII net inflows into primary markets stood at $8.1 billion , while secondary markets saw net outflows of $49.3 billion , per JM Financial Institutional .

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) reversed course to become net buyers in Indian equity markets this week, deploying ₹4,670 crore based on provisional exchange data. The shift marks a notable change in sentiment after FIIs were net sellers of roughly $3 billion in June.

Domestic Investors Hold Steady

Domestic institutional investors (DIIs) continued their consistent buying trend, purchasing ₹8,280 crore during the same period. DIIs have served as a counterbalance to FII volatility through much of the past year, absorbing outflows that would otherwise have pressured index levels more sharply.

Adding to the bullish domestic backdrop, mutual fund SIP contributions climbed to a three-month high of ₹31,780 crore in June, according to data released by the Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI). This represents a 2.7% month-on-month rise from ₹30,950 crore in May, and a 16.5% year-on-year jump from ₹27,270 crore recorded in June 2025.

Market Volatility and the Nifty Swing

Pabitro Mukherjee, Deputy Vice President – Research at Bajaj Broking, noted that benchmark indices snapped a four-week winning streak, trading with high volatility and closing marginally lower last week. 'Nifty started the week on a positive note and rallied to form an intra-week high of 24,530 on Tuesday's session,' he said.

A sharp mid-week decline, triggered by renewed geopolitical tensions between the US and Iran, erased recent gains and pushed the index to an intra-week low of 23,805 on Wednesday. The index staged a partial recovery in the final two sessions, closing near 24,200 — down 0.3% for the week.

Policy Tailwinds Boosting FII Confidence

According to market analysts, improvements to the tax structure for foreign debt investors and policy measures designed to attract foreign currency inflows have helped restore institutional confidence. FII participation in domestic debt markets has been particularly notable, with flows estimated at $5–$6 billion, according to market watchers.

The Longer-Term FII Picture

Over the past 12 months, the picture has been uneven. Indian primary markets recorded FII net inflows of $8.1 billion, while secondary markets saw FII net outflows of $49.3 billion, according to a report by JM Financial Institutional. This divergence underscores that while new issuances continue to attract foreign capital, the secondary equity market has faced sustained FII selling pressure — a trend this week's buying may be beginning to reverse.

With SIP flows at a three-month high and FIIs returning to the buy side, the near-term direction of the market will hinge on global risk cues, particularly any further escalation in US-Iran tensions and the trajectory of US monetary policy.

Point of View

And the trigger — policy tweaks on foreign debt taxation — addresses the margin, not the core concern of global risk-off sentiment. The real story is the SIP engine: retail India is now the market's shock absorber, with ₹31,780 crore flowing in monthly almost regardless of FII direction. If that retail confidence holds, India can weather FII volatility better than it could a decade ago — but it cannot substitute for the liquidity depth that sustained FII participation brings to secondary markets.
NationPress
11 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did FIIs turn net buyers in Indian markets this week?
FIIs purchased a net ₹4,670 crore in Indian equity markets this week, reversing from net selling in June. Analysts attribute the shift partly to improved tax policies for foreign debt investors and measures aimed at attracting foreign currency flows.
What is the latest mutual fund SIP contribution figure?
Mutual fund SIP contributions reached ₹31,780 crore in June 2025, a three-month high. This is 2.7% higher than May's ₹30,950 crore and 16.5% above the ₹27,270 crore recorded in June 2025 — reflecting sustained retail investor participation.
How did the Nifty50 perform last week?
The Nifty50 snapped a four-week winning streak, swinging between an intra-week high of 24,530 and a low of 23,805 before closing near 24,200, down 0.3% for the week. The mid-week drop was driven by renewed US-Iran geopolitical tensions.
What does the 12-month FII flow data show?
According to JM Financial Institutional, Indian primary markets recorded FII net inflows of $8.1 billion over the past 12 months, while secondary markets saw net outflows of $49.3 billion. The divergence suggests foreign capital is selective — favouring new issuances over existing equity.
How much did DIIs invest in Indian markets this week?
Domestic institutional investors were net buyers of ₹8,280 crore this week, continuing their consistent pattern of absorbing FII selling pressure and providing a stabilising force in Indian equity markets.
Nation Press
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