FPIs temper selling but derivatives bets still signal caution
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Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) are currently sending mixed signals to the Indian stock market. While they've shown some buying interest in the cash market, scooping up ₹7,778 crore worth of shares last week, their bets in the derivatives market suggest lingering caution. This hesitation comes even as the Nifty saw a modest 1.65% gain last week, highlighting a deeper unease among global investors about Indian equities. The persistent doubt among FPIs is fueled by several interconnected factors. A recently signed but fragile US-Iran peace deal, formalized as the 'Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding' on June 17, 2026, aiming for a 60-day negotiation window, creates geopolitical uncertainty. Coupled with this, the Indian rupee has weakened by roughly 6% this year and 10% over the past year, now hovering around ₹95 against the US dollar, making Indian assets less attractive. Adding to the complexity, more appealing investment opportunities are drawing FPI capital away from India towards other Asian markets like South Korea and Taiwan, which have seen significant gains in 2026, especially in AI-linked sectors. The high long-short ratio in Nifty futures, at 12.95% on Friday, clearly reflects this lack of strong bullish sentiment, despite a marginal improvement from two weeks prior. Market watchers are now closely scrutinizing FPI behavior, particularly whether their derivative positions will shift towards a more bullish stance, indicating sustained confidence in India. The stability of the US-Iran peace deal and its implications for global oil prices, especially given Iran's Saturday threat to close the Strait of Hormuz amidst Israeli attacks in Lebanon, will be critical in shaping investor sentiment and the rupee trajectory. Should the rupee stabilize further, potentially aided by falling crude prices, and global geopolitical tensions ease, India might see a more robust return of foreign capital. Conversely, continued global volatility and the allure of other markets could keep FPIs on the sidelines, maintaining a cautious outlook on the Indian equity market.