Will India once again be on the FII shopping list? In three days, more than Rs 11,000 crore was purchased.

In three trading days, foreign institutional investors (FIIs) bought stocks worth Rs 11,100 crore, marking a significant resurgence in Indian markets after weeks of relentless selling. After 38 consecutive sessions of net withdrawals from Indian markets, this is a notable turnaround. On Monday, FIIs bought stocks valued at Rs 9,947.55 crore, starting the purchasing trend….

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Despite poor markets, equity fund inflows reached a record high of Rs 41,887 cr in October: AMFI

According to data published on November 11 by the Association of Mutual Funds of India (AMFI), the trade association for mutual funds, open-ended equities mutual fund inflows increased 21.69 percent month-over-month (MoM) to Rs 41,887 crore in October across the equity fund category. For the 44th consecutive month, inflows into open-ended equities funds were in…

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Benchmarks drop to two-month lows due to FPI withdrawals and poor earnings.

Benchmark indices extended their downward trajectory on Thursday, closing at their lowest points in almost two months due to disappointing earnings and ongoing selling by foreign portfolio investors (FPIs), which dampened investor sentiment. After posting dismal profits for the September quarter, Bajaj Auto saw a 13% decline, making it the biggest loss on the Nifty….

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FPIs Keep Up Their Selling Trend! Outflows of Rs 55,742 crore over the last seven days

For the seventh straight trading session on Tuesday, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) kept selling Indian stocks, taking out an extra Rs 5,729 crore. With the largest single-day selloff on October 4, when FPIs offloaded Rs 15,506 crore, data shows that the cumulative outflow by FPIs over the previous seven days has reached Rs 55,742 crore….

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Rate cuts are unlikely given the spike in crude oil prices; all eyes are on the RBI MPC.

Following three straight weeks of gains, the markets had a severe decline, losing 4.5%, mostly due to unfavorable global cues. Beginning with growing tensions in the Middle East, which increased the price of crude oil due to concerns about supply disruptions, the mood was pessimistic. Further lowering market optimism was the ongoing FII selling, which…

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