Global institutional liquidity is turning its eyes back to New Delhi. Driven by a swift drop in crude oil prices and aggressive central bank interventions to stabilize the rupee, cross-border asset managers are actively unwinding their underweights in Asia’s third-largest economy.
The critical macro metrics and portfolio realignments shaping the capital rotation:
⚡ The Rupee & Crude Relief Matrix
- The FX Rebound: Bolstered by central bank measures to draw dollar inflows, the Indian rupee has staged a major recovery, climbing to 94.50 per dollar from its all-time low of 97 on May 20. It emerged as one of Asia’s top-performing currencies in June.
- The Oil Lifeline: As crude prices slid back down to pre-war levels, extreme fiscal pressure has eased for a nation that relies on imports to satisfy nearly 90% of its crude requirements.
- The Inflow U-Turn: Exchange data confirms daily foreign selling has slowed drastically, while Elara Capital tracking shows U.S.-listed India ETFs just posted their first positive net capital inflows in over a month.
📉 Reversing the 17.5% Allocation Slump
- The Emerging Market Shift: Stretched premium valuations and FX volatility previously caused global emerging market funds to slash average India allocations from a peak of 17.5% in August 2024 down to below 10% in April.
- The AI Profit-Taking: Multi-billion-dollar asset managers like M&G (managing $450B) are scaling back over-extended technology positions in South Korea and Taiwan to free up capital and double down on high-conviction Indian holdings.
- The Valuation Play: Heavyweights like William Blair ($65B) and Eastspring Investments ($270B) note that India has entered “oversold” territory, making the valuation premium highly attractive for selective entry.
🔮 The Earnings Hurdle to Watch While the macro backdrop has structurally improved, global institutions like State Street ($5.6T) and Matthews Asia caution that sustained inflows depend entirely on bottom-line corporate performance. Following two fiscal years of single-digit stagnation, Wall Street strategists project India’s earnings growth must accelerate to the mid-teens in the current fiscal year to justify long-term capital reallocations.
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