Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) marked 2025 as a historic year for selling in the Indian stock market. Net outflows touched ₹3,06,419 crore, the highest ever recorded. This exceeded the heavy selling of ₹3,02,434 crore in 2024 and followed earlier exits of ₹16,510 crore in 2023, ₹2,78,429 crore in 2022, and ₹92,729 crore in 2021. Over five consecutive years, FIIs have consistently reduced exposure, making caution the dominant theme in India finance flows.
As India enters 2026, investors now ask a crucial question: will FII selling continue, or can the trend finally reverse? Global factors largely drove the recent exits. High interest rates in developed markets, elevated US bond yields, geopolitical risks, and portfolio realignments pulled capital away from emerging markets, including India. Even strong domestic fundamentals could not fully shield the stock market from these global pressures.
However, the India stock market today looks structurally stronger than in previous cycles. Domestic Institutional Investors and retail investors have stepped up in a big way. Their consistent inflows absorbed FII selling and prevented deeper corrections. This shift has reduced India’s long-term dependence on foreign capital and added stability to the market.
Looking ahead, 2026 may not mirror the extreme selling of 2025. If global liquidity conditions improve and interest rates soften, FIIs could turn selective buyers rather than aggressive sellers. At the same time, richly valued sectors may continue to see profit booking, while fundamentally strong companies with clear earnings growth could attract fresh capital.
Volatility will likely remain part of the journey, but the nature of the market appears to be changing. India’s stock market in 2026 may reward discipline, fundamentals, and stock selection over momentum and blind inflows. While 2025 will stand out as a year of record FII exits, 2026 could highlight the growing maturity and resilience of India finance and capital markets.
Business
INDIA
Stocks



