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DIIs Invest ₹5.3 Lakh Crore in Equities in 2025, Surpassing Last Year’s Total

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Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs) — which include mutual funds, insurance companies, pension funds, banks, PMS/AIFs etc. — have net invested ~₹5.3 lakh crore into Indian equities so far in 2025, already exceeding the full-year total for 2024 (which was ~₹5.22 lakh crore).


Key Drivers & Breakdown

  • Mutual funds are the biggest contributors, with ~₹3.65 lakh crore. SIP inflows remain strong, often crossing ₹25,000 crore monthly.
  • Insurance companies & pension funds have together added over ₹1 lakh crore. Other institutional flows include PMS, AIFs, banks, etc.
  • Cash holdings in mutual funds remain elevated (for example, around ₹1.98 lakh crore in August) which provides scope for further deployment.

Why This Matters

  • DIIs are acting as a stabilising force, absorbing large foreign outflows (FPIs have been net sellers this year). That makes DIIs’ role crucial for market support.
  • High domestic inflows suggest growing investor confidence in India’s economic fundamentals, attractive corporate earnings prospects, policy continuity, and macro stability. mint
  • With fresh money from DIIs, the equity market is less vulnerable to external shocks (global rate changes, currency fluctuations) than in years past.

Risks & Caveats

  • Though the aggregate inflow looks strong, returns have been modest in some segments — small/mid caps have underperformed relative to large cap indices.
  • Elevated valuations in certain sectors mean risks are higher. If earnings don’t catch up, some corrections may happen.
  • As DIIs have already invested so much, future increments may be affected by household savings, GST changes, consumer spending pressures, etc.

Outlook & Implications

  • If this momentum continues through the rest of the year, total DII inflows for 2025 may well cross ₹6 lakh crore. mint+1
  • Strong DII flows can attract more listings, better liquidity, and fairness in pricing across sectors.
  • For individual investors, this sets up a favourable environment for long-term equity exposure; but stock selection and risk management will matter.

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