Mumbai, May 23 (IANS) Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) remained net sellers this week, offloading Rs 7,570 crore based on provisional exchange data as domestic institutional investors (DIIs) were net buyers, purchasing Rs 16,950 crore, providing enough cushion.
In the month of May, FIIs have sold a cumulative Rs 32,230 crore, while DIIs have bought Rs 56,870 crore, based on provisional exchange data.
FIIs were net buyer on Monday’s session with inflow of Rs 2,810 crore.
“However, they turned net seller in the remaining four sessions of the week with outflow of Rs 10,380 crore. DIIs remained net buyer in all the five-trading session during last week with net inflow of Rs 16,950 crore,” said Pabitro Mukherjee, Associate Vice President- Research, Bajaj Broking.
Benchmark indices traded choppy with high volatility swinging between gains and losses as investors navigated heightened market uncertainty and mixed cues across sectors.
Nifty during last week traded in the broad range of 23,300-23,850, with the index testing the upper and lower band on multiple occasion and finally close the week at 23,719 levels, up by 0.3 per cent.
According to analysts, the currency backdrop continues to remain a structural concern. Despite resilience in global equities, the Indian rupee continues to trade near weak levels against the US dollar.
Persistent currency weakness not only heightens imported inflation risks but also keeps foreign institutional investors cautious towards emerging markets such as India.
“As a result, broader market stability continues to rely significantly on domestic institutional inflows absorbing periods of FII-led selling pressure,” they said.
Investor sentiment remained cautious due to persistent geo-political tensions, which continued to keep crude oil prices elevated.
Meanwhile, a sharp rise in bond yields, driven by concerns over rising inflation and the possibility of prolonged higher interest rates, kept investors on edge.
Overall, global uncertainty and macroeconomic headwinds led to cautious trading activity across the markets. Looking ahead, institutional flows are likely to remain sensitive to developments around US–Iran tensions, oil-price movement, said analysts.
—IANS
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