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FIIs Retreat, DIIs Rise – A New Power Balance in Indian Equities

Posted on September 14, 2025September 14, 2025 by anilravi.nair

In 2025, Indian equity markets are witnessing a historic inflection point: Foreign Institutional Investor (FII) ownership has fallen to a decadal low, while domestic money—mutual funds, insurers, pension funds, and retail—has decisively stepped up.

This shift marks not just a change in market share but a structural transformation in how India’s growth is funded, valued, and owned.


The Dramatic Shift: FIIs Take a Back Seat

  • FII ownership in NSE-listed firms slid to 15.85% in August 2025—lowest since 2012—amounting to ₹70.33 lakh crore in value.
  • In the Nifty 500, DII ownership surged to 19.2%, overtaking FII stakes (18.8%) for the first time ever.
  • The FII-to-DII ratio has collapsed from 2.1x (2015) to ~1x (2025), signalling a market where domestic conviction now balances foreign capital.

Why Are FIIs Pulling Back?

  • Valuations: Indian equities consistently trade at a premium; FIIs see better relative value in China, Korea, and LATAM.
  • Global Headwinds: Strong dollar, higher US bond yields, and global slowdown fears reduce FII risk appetite.
  • Profit Booking: After a stellar decade and a post-COVID rally, FIIs have booked gains, raising volatility.
  • Sectoral Shifts: IT—once a favourite—faced outflows due to recession risks and AI-driven disruption of legacy models.

Domestic Investors: The New Market Backbone

  • Capital Flows: Since FY15, DIIs have invested $195 bn, versus FIIs’ $53 bn. Domestic pools now drive incremental liquidity.
  • Retail Revolution: Over 7.7 crore demat accounts, SIP inflows of ₹20,000+ crore monthly, and digital access have democratized ownership.
  • Resilience Factor: In September 2025, despite ₹10,782 crore of FII selling, Nifty held firm—proof that domestic money absorbs shocks.
  • Sector Bets: DIIs are overweight in banks, defence, autos, capital goods, and consumer durables—mirroring India’s growth engines.

Implications: Market, Economy, and Corporates

1. Market Resilience

India’s equity market is now less hostage to “hot money” swings, improving stability and reducing global contagion risks.

2. Financial Sovereignty

With domestic ownership at record highs, Indian markets enjoy a new level of self-reliance, insulating policy and growth from abrupt FII withdrawals.

3. Selective FII Playbook

FIIs aren’t exiting entirely—they’re becoming more nuanced, returning to sectors with clear earnings visibility (banking, defence, telecom).

4. Corporate Governance Pressure

With promoters at record-low holdings, companies must engage transparently with DIIs and retail. Governance lapses will now face domestic pushback, not just FII scrutiny.

5. Policy & Reform Tailwinds

Stable policies, deeper pension/insurance participation, and financialization of household savings (₹330 lakh crore+ household wealth pool) will sustain this homegrown capital era.


Bottom Line

India’s equity market is no longer defined by the whims of foreign money. The decadal low in FII ownership marks the coming of age of Indian capital markets—driven by local conviction, rising affluence, and institutional depth.

This isn’t the end of FIIs—it’s the end of their dominance.
The new equilibrium is a market where domestic savings fund domestic growth—a foundation for resilience, self-reliance, and long-term wealth creation.

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