Domestic Institutional Investors Pour ₹5 lakh crore In Indian Equities, Highlighting Influence In Stabilising Markets Amid Foreign Outflows

Domestic Institutional Investors Pour ₹5 lakh crore In Indian Equities, Highlighting Influence In Stabilising Markets Amid Foreign Outflows

Despite recent volatility on the Dalal Street, the counter-buying by DIIs in response to significant selling by FPIs is greater than in past instances, including the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and the 2022 sell-off, a report from ICICI Securities said.

IANSUpdated: Monday, September 01, 2025, 11:47 AM IST
article-image
File Image |

Mumbai: Domestic institutional investors (DIIs) have poured over Rs 5 lakh crore in Indian equities (year to date), highlighting their increasing influence in stabilising markets amid foreign outflows.Provisional NSE data indicates that mutual funds, banks, insurers, and other domestic institutions net purchased Rs 5.13 lakh crore in equities so far in 2025, following a record Rs 5.25 lakh crore worth of purchases in 2024.

Domestic buying has increased while foreign institutional investors (FIIs) entered a relentless selling phase, withdrawing over Rs 1.6 lakh crore from the secondary market this year, following a pullout of nearly Rs 1.21 lakh crore in 2024, according to NSDL data.

Despite recent volatility on the Dalal Street, the counter-buying by DIIs in response to significant selling by FPIs is greater than in past instances, including the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and the 2022 sell-off, a report from ICICI Securities said.DII inflows helped absorb selling pressure from FIIs, significant promoter offloads and profit-booking by private equity funds.Strong domestic flows, however, have not led to widespread gains.

Indices across all market capitalisations have shown flat to negative performance over the past 12 months.After a volatile year in 2025, the Sensex stood 1.96 per cent up YTD, as the Nifty advanced by 3.28 per cent. In contrast, the BSE MidCap index had declined over 3.8 per cent, while the BSE smallcap index dropped over 6.7 per cent.

According to analysts, domestically, India’s Q1 GDP growth number at 7.8 per cent came much better than expected.Both the budget's fiscal stimulus and the MPC's monetary stimulus are acting with a lag. The proposed GST reforms can accelerate growth in the coming quarters, they added.

This, along with the huge liquidity coming into mutual funds, will continue to support the market.DII inflows (YTD) in 2025 reached 2.2 per cent of the average Nifty market capitalisation, marking the highest level since 2007.

Disclaimer: This story is from the syndicated feed. Nothing has changed except the headline.

RECENT STORIES

No GST On Life And Health Insurance Premiums From September 22: GST Council Announces Relief For...

No GST On Life And Health Insurance Premiums From September 22: GST Council Announces Relief For...

GST 2.0: What Gets Cheaper And Costlier From September 22

GST 2.0: What Gets Cheaper And Costlier From September 22

Independence Day Pledge Realised: PM Modi Welcomes Historic GST Overhaul With Two-Tier Tax Structure

Independence Day Pledge Realised: PM Modi Welcomes Historic GST Overhaul With Two-Tier Tax Structure

GST Council Reaches Consensus On Rate Restructuring; New Tax Slabs to Take Effect from September 22...

GST Council Reaches Consensus On Rate Restructuring; New Tax Slabs to Take Effect from September 22...

Gold Prices Hit Record ₹1.07 Lakh Per 10 Grams In Delhi Amid Fed Rate Hopes, Geopolitical Tensions

Gold Prices Hit Record ₹1.07 Lakh Per 10 Grams In Delhi Amid Fed Rate Hopes, Geopolitical Tensions