Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have intensified their retreat from the Indian market, with cumulative outflows for 2026 already crossing the ₹1.75 lakh crore (~$18.6 billion) mark as of late April.
This massive sell-off has already eclipsed the record set in 2025 (₹1.59 lakh crore), making the first four months of 2026 the most aggressive period of foreign capital withdrawal in Indian market history.
1. The Sell-Off Timeline: A Volatile Start
While the year began with caution, the exit accelerated dramatically in the spring of 2026.
- January: FPIs started the year as net sellers, pulling out roughly $2.11 billion (₹18,000+ crore) due to high valuations and global trade uncertainty.
- February (The Brief Reprieve): In a short-lived reversal, FPIs became net buyers of ₹22,615 crore, encouraged by a growth-focused Union Budget and stabilizing inflation.
- March & April (The Record Crash): Selling resumed with unprecedented intensity. March alone saw outflows of ₹1.17 lakh crore, the worst single month on record. As of April 25, another ₹43,967 crore had been pulled from equities.
2. Primary Drivers of the Exit
The “Great Exit” of 2026 is driven by a convergence of global macroeconomic pressures rather than a deterioration in India’s domestic fundamentals.
- Geopolitical “Safe Haven” Shift: Escalations in West Asia (involving the US, Israel, and Iran) have triggered a global “risk-off” sentiment. Investors are moving capital out of emerging markets and into safe havens like Gold and US Treasuries.
- Oil and Macro Stress: With Brent crude crossing the $100 per barrel mark in April, concerns over India’s Current Account Deficit (CAD) and rising inflation have spiked.
- The Valuation Gap: Indian equities continue to trade at a significant premium. FPIs are reallocating to “cheaper” Asian markets like South Korea and Taiwan, which are benefiting more directly from the global AI and semiconductor boom.
- Currency Pressure: The Indian Rupee hit an intraday low of ₹94.06 in late March. A weakening rupee erodes dollar-denominated returns, forcing FPIs to liquidate holdings to prevent further currency-driven losses.
3. Sectoral Impact: Financials Under Fire
The selling has been widespread, impacting 19 out of 23 tracked sectors, but the heavy lifting has come from the “big two.”
| Sector | Impact in 2026 | Primary Reason |
| Financial Services | ₹60,000+ Crore Outflow | High foreign ownership levels and sensitivity to rising bond yields. |
| Information Tech | Persistent Selling | Concerns over AI disruption and slowing enterprise tech spending in the US. |
| FMCG | Consistent Exit | Inflationary pressure on margins and weak urban consumption trends. |
| Power & Cap. Goods | Minor Inflows | Remained resilient due to the government’s sustained infrastructure push. |
4. Market Resilience: The Domestic Shield
Despite $18 billion leaving the country, the Nifty 50 and Sensex have shown remarkable resilience compared to previous FPI exodus events (like 2008 or 2013).
- Domestic Strength: Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs) and retail investors, fueled by record SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) inflows, have largely absorbed the foreign selling.
- Ownership Shift: FPI ownership in NSE-listed companies has fallen to 16.9%, the lowest level in over 15 years, while domestic mutual fund ownership has reached a decade-high.