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For every ₹100 pulled out by foreign investors from the Indian equity markets, domestic investors have ploughed back ₹89 this year

Sep 16, 2022, 07:00 IST
Business Insider India
Indian stock markets have been well-supported by domestic investors in 2022 so farBCCL
  • India stock markets have outperformed their global peers despite an unprecedented foreign investor sell off in 2022.
  • Since the beginning of 2022, foreign investors have pulled out over ₹2.6 lakh crore from the Indian markets.
  • Despite this, Indian stock markets have remained resilient, and the credit goes to the domestic investors.
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India has seen an unprecedented sell off by foreign investors this year. Yet, Indian stock markets have remained strong performers compared to most of their major peers globally – all thanks to domestic investors.

Domestic investors have been so strong in 2022, they have almost completely made up for the money pulled out by foreign investors.

It’s not just a momentary phenomenon either – a report by Morgan Stanley has discovered that since 2015, foreign investor holdings in 75 Indian companies have come down by 230 basis points to 24.8%, while mutual funds and individual investors have together increased their stakes by 737 basis points to 18.5%.

Here’s how Indian stock markets have performed compared to their global peers:

IndexYTD performance
Nifty501.6%
Sensex1.4%
FTSE 100-3%
Nikkei 225-4.9%
Dow Jones-14.9%
S&P 500-17.7%
DAX-18.7%
Nasdaq-26%

Note: As on September 15, 2022
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According to data, while foreign investors have pulled out over ₹2.6 lakh crore from the equity markets in 2022 till date, domestic investors have put in over ₹2.32 lakh crore.

Essentially, for every ₹100 pulled out by foreign investors, domestic investors have ploughed back nearly ₹89.

Foreign investors vs domestic investors in 2022Business Insider India / Flourish

Several factors explain just how strong the domestic investor momentum has been in the past two years.

Here are a few reasons:

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Three new demat accounts every four seconds since 2020



For one, the number of demat accounts have exploded – more demat accounts were opened in the last three years than the last two decades.

There were a little under 40 million demat accounts at the end of 2019. Then the Covid-19 pandemic broke out – with people cooped up in homes and there being very few avenues for investment, people thronged to the stock markets.

As a result, over 60 million demat accounts were opened between January 2020 and August 2022 – on an average, that’s a little under 2 million new accounts every month, or three new demat accounts every four seconds.


SIPs hit a record high – and they are only growing


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Indians have taken to mutual funds and systematic investment plans (SIPs) in record numbers – according to data from AMFI, mutual fund accounts stood at 57.2 million at the end of August 2022.

Month-wise SIP flows since 2018 till August, 2022Business Insider India / Flourish

But what’s even more interesting is the amount of SIPs – after touching ₹10,000 crore per month for the first time in September 2021, Indian investors have never looked back, with the average SIP per month now 63% higher than 2018.

Average monthly SIPs and total SIPs from 2018 to August, 2022Business Insider India / Flourish

This also reflects in the assets under management (AUM) of the Indian mutual fund industry – according to AMFI, AUM in August 2022 stood at ₹39.53 lakh crore.

This is over 5x higher than AUM in 2012, which stood at ₹7.53 lakh crore.
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Indian mutual funds’ AUM stood at ₹30 lakh crore in November 2020, and it took the industry 22 months to add another nearly ₹10 lakh crore to its kitty.

Indians are taking to investing faster than ever before, and it’s now reflecting in a big way in stock markets and mutual funds.

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