Business/Technology

EU investors eye fresh investments in Indian equities, says Macquarie

New Mania Desk / Piyal Chatterjee / 10th March  2025

According to financial behemoth Macquarie, investors from EU countries are seeking to increase their investments in local stocks by reducing their underweight stance. The analysts mentioned in a note that EU investors carefully track mutual fund (MF) inflows to assess domestic investor mood.

“Across our meetings with 30 EU investors last week, we clearly felt, at the margin, post the recent correction in Indian markets (Nifty down about 15 per cent from the peak levels in September 2024), investors are looking to deploy money into Indian markets. While most of them did not want to go to an overweight position, they were thinking of cutting their current underweight stance,” strategists Suresh Ganapathy and Punit Bahlani wrote

European countries rank as some of the top locations for foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) in India. Luxembourg, Ireland, the UK, Norway, and the Netherlands rank among the top 10 jurisdictions for FPI.

FPIs have withdrawn more than $15 billion from local equities this year in 2025. The decline has been linked to India’s slowdown in earnings and economic growth, high valuations, and the increasing appeal of Chinese stocks.

“Many believe India is a structural story and China has structural issues and at best a tactical short-term play. Few investors believe China is a structural re-rating story from current levels and believe President Xi Jinping will use the stock markets as a tool to drive wealth effect and consequently revive consumption,” said Macquarie’s analysts.

“Investors were worried how domestic liquidity could get impacted post the recent correction and were keenly tracking the monthly SIP (systematic investment plans) inflows and overall mutual fund inflows. Any dip in inflows could be the biggest risk derailing the recovery in Indian markets as per them,” the note added.

In February, the benchmark Nifty 50 fell nearly 6 per cent, while the Nifty Midcap 100 and Nifty Smallcap 100 indices declined 11 per cent and 13 per cent, respectively. The data on inflows into domestic mutual funds for February will be made public on Wednesday.

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