Mumbai – Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) have made a significant return to the Indian equity market in October 2025 breaking three month streak of heavy net outflow. FPI gave much needed support by investing ₹6,480 crore up to mid-month, after three-month outflows totaling over ₹76,000 crore from July to September.
This renewed inflow signals a fresh wave of confidence among global investors towards India’s macroeconomic stability and market prospects, after a period marked by caution and selling pressure.
Market dynamics underpinning this shift include several key factors. India’s robust macroeconomic fundamentals – steady growth, manageable inflation, and resilient domestic demand – make the country stand out among emerging markets.
Additionally, easing global liquidity constraints and expectations of a pause or reduction in US interest rates have improved the risk appetite among global investors.
Another important catalyst has been the narrowing valuation gap between Indian equities and other global markets, making Indian stocks more attractive for “dip-buying.”
Trade tensions between India and the US have also moderated, further improving investor sentiment.
Indian equities have been performing strongly alongside this FPI inflow. Key benchmark indices reached 52-week highs recently, with the Nifty closing above 25,700 and the Sensex surpassing 83,950 points.
Sector-wise gains were led by realty, consumer durables, automobiles, financial services, and FMCG, highlighting a broad-based recovery fueled by consumption and positive earnings momentum during the festive season.
Domestic institutional investors also remained active, with significant net purchases supporting the rally.
Despite the positive momentum in October, FPIs have still recorded net outflows of about ₹1.5 lakh crore for the calendar year 2025, indicating that the market is still in a phase of recalibration. In parallel to equities, FPIs invested over ₹5,500 crore in Indian debt instruments in October, signaling a sustained interest across asset classes.
Looking forward, experts suggest that upcoming corporate earnings results and trade developments will be critical in shaping the course of FPI flows in the near term.
The current investment rhythm reflects an improving outlook for India’s capital markets amid a global environment of cautious optimism.