Context:
β’ As of 4 November 2025, FPIs have sold βΉ1.5 lakh crore in Indian equities β largest sell-off in ~20 years.
β’ Triggered by fading benefit of China-to-India reshoring narrative and relatively high valuations.
β’ Concerns over corporate earnings stagnation and structural economic risks.
Key Highlights:
- Drivers of FPI Withdrawal
β’ India benefited earlier from investors exiting China β inflow boost.
β’ High Price-to-Earnings (PE) ratio (~22x) β Indian equities perceived expensive relative to global peers.
β’ Flat corporate earnings over past 4β6 quarters; forward earnings growth projected 10β11%, below investor expectations. - Divergent Expert Views
β’ Some analysts: valuations returning to long-term average, may support market rebound.
β’ Realistic earnings growth aligned with single-digit nominal GDP growth tempers expectations.
β’ Consensus: revival of FPI participation requires corporate earnings growth 15β20% or significant valuation compression. - Impact on FDI and Economy
β’ Net FDI trends lower; total foreign investment as % of GDP at 25-year low (2024β25).
β’ Persistent low corporate performance β reduces private capital expenditure, household income growth, and lending growth.
β’ Government infrastructure and household transfers partly offset slowdown.
β’ World Bank (WDR 2024) warns of risk of βMiddle Income Trapβ without institutional reforms. - Structural Challenges
β’ Low corporate profitability and sluggish private sector growth limit sustainable domestic demand.
β’ Policy reforms needed to maintain Indiaβs trajectory towards high-income economy.
β’ De-globalisation trends exacerbate structural risks.
Relevant Prelims Points:
β’ FPI (Foreign Portfolio Investment) β passive investment in equity/bonds; sensitive to market sentiment.
β’ FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) β equity investment in businesses, long-term commitment.
β’ Middle Income Trap β emerging economies stagnate at middle-income levels without reforms.
β’ PE ratio = Price/Earnings; high PE β potentially overvalued equity.
Relevant Mains Points:
β’ FPI trends reflect market confidence, not just macroeconomic fundamentals.
β’ Need for corporate earnings growth + structural reforms to sustain capital inflows.
β’ GS3 links β Capital markets, investment climate, private sector performance, macroeconomic stability.
β’ Way Forward:
β Boost corporate earnings via reforms, incentives, ease of doing business
β Institutional strengthening to attract FDI & retain FPIs
β Diversify investor base; reduce dependency on volatile portfolio inflows
β Policy stability + credible governance β reduce risk perception
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
β’ GS3 β Indian economy: capital markets, FDI/FPI flows, investment climate, macroeconomic stability.
