City
Epaper

Indian equity markets show 'structural resilience' amid FII outflows

By IANS | Updated: March 22, 2026 09:50 IST

New Delhi, March 22 The Indian equity markets are demonstrating 'structural resilience' despite intense global macro headwinds and ...

Open in App

New Delhi, March 22 The Indian equity markets are demonstrating 'structural resilience' despite intense global macro headwinds and foreign institutional investors (FII) outflows, according to analysts.

For the week ending March 20, a persistent risk-off sentiment among FIIs was observed, with weekly net outflows totaling Rs 29,718.9 crore.

This exodus, coupled with a surging US Dollar index, pressured the Indian rupee to a provisional record low of 93.71.

“Remarkably, the Nifty 50 maintained its integrity, closing at 23,114.50 (+0.49 per cent) as domestic institutional investors (DIIs) acted as a formidable counterforce with weekly net purchases of Rs 30,269.23 crore,” said Vinit Bolinjkar, Head of Research-Ventura.

Markets ended the week on a largely flat note with a negative bias, reflecting underlying caution among participants. The tone remained positive during the first three sessions; however, a sharp decline on Thursday erased the gains, followed by a volatile final session.

Consequently, Nifty declined 0.16 per cent to close at 23,114.50, while Sensex edged lower by 0.04 per cent to settle at 74,532.96.

During the initial sessions, sentiment was supported by partial resumption of vessel movement through the Strait of Hormuz.

“However, renewed geopolitical tensions following Israel’s attack on Iran’s energy infrastructure pushed crude oil prices back toward recent highs near $119 per barrel. Although prices moderated slightly thereafter, they remain elevated,” said Ajit Mishra–SVP, Research, Religare Broking Ltd.

Additionally, continued weakness in the rupee against the US dollar and subdued global market cues, particularly from the US, added to the pressure.

This was reflected in sustained FII outflows during the week.

Given the fragile sentiment, persistent FII outflows, and ongoing global uncertainties, investors should maintain a cautious and selective approach. Positioning should favour fundamentally strong large-cap stocks and sectors with stable earnings visibility, said analysts.

While Brent crude remains volatile near $107 per barrel due to West Asian tensions, the stabilisation of the India VIX at 22.81 suggests a market base is forming.

“We maintain a range-bound outlook between 22,800 and 23,300, with a positive bias contingent on the stabilisation of global energy prices and a cooling of the currency's volatility,” said market observers.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalCongress on edge as Kerala CM race enters crucial phase

Politics"Political violence is in DNA of TMC": BJP's Shehzad Poonawalla on killing of Suvendu Adhikari's PA

Politics"Vijay will surely become the CM of Tamil Nadu," says TVK leader Ganeshan

PoliticsChennai: TVK chief Vijay arrives at Lok Bhavan to meet Governor Arlekar for second round meeting

MumbaiMumbai: Cyber Fraudsters Steal Rs 19.74 Lakh From Four Bank Accounts Over Rs 12 Gas Bill Scam

Business Realted Stories

BusinessZoho’s Sridhar Vembu seeks President rule, fresh elections in Tamil Nadu

BusinessGIFT City Is Not a Tax Shelter. It Is a Tax Architecture. And the Difference Matters.

BusinessApple to invest Rs 100 crore in India’s renewable energy infrastructure

BusinessSamsung withdraws home appliance, TV sales biz in China

BusinessSensex, Nifty trade higher as hopes of US-Iran deal lift market sentiment