The market participants in the upcoming week starting from Monday will react to the foreign institutional investment flow, currency movement, speculation regarding U.S. tariffs and their impact on global trade and key domestic data.
The benchmark Nifty 50 index was trading with a marginal decline of 42 points at 23,338.70, while the BSE Sensex slipped by 114 points to 77,196.86 at the time of reporting.
Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) continue to hold approximately USD 800 billion worth of Indian equities, but their ongoing selling remains a risk for the stock market, according to a report by BNP Paribas Exane, a European equity research firm.
The belief that domestic investors are now the driving force behind the market movement is denied in a recent report by the financial service company Nuvama.
According to the latest data by Savills India, a global property consulting firm, foreign institutional investors accounted for 88 per cent of the total investment activity in 2024, reinforcing their dominant role in driving growth in the sector.
As we are inching closer to the new calendar year and month, the market participants in the Indian stock market will closely watch auto sales data, foreign institutional investments (FIIs) flows and currency movement, the upcoming earnings season, the Union Budget, and the inauguration of
The participants in the market will be keenly monitor Foreign Institutional Investments (FIIs) flow trends, global market performance, and Initial Public Offering activities in the domestic markets for the direction, stated market analysts.
FII outflows reduced to Rs182 billion (USD 2.2 billion) in November, a sharp drop from Rs919 billion (USD 10.9 billion) in October.
Interestingly, the month showcased a tale of two halves. While FIIs remained net sellers in the first half of November, with outflows of Rs195 billion (USD 2.3