Beyond the FII Selloff: The 84 Multibagger Stocks Foreign Investors are Buying

While headlines are dominated by a massive ₹5.5 lakh crore exodus of Foreign Institutional Investor (FII) funds from the Indian market, a sophisticated rotation is happening under the surface. Beneath the heavy selling in banking and large-cap stocks lies a strategic accumulation of 84 specific stocks that have delivered multibagger returns.

The Great Rotation: From Heavyweights to High-Growth Gems

Since September 2024, FIIs have been aggressively dumping heavyweight financial stocks. However, data from ACE Equity reveals a contrary trend in the mid- and small-cap segments. Instead of a total exit, foreign investors appear to be rotating their capital into high-growth companies.

The scale of this hidden accumulation is staggering. For instance, Midwest Energy saw an FII stake rise from zero in September 2024 to over 12% by March 2026, riding a massive two-year return of 19,859%. Other standout performers include Sumeet Industries (6,376% return), CIAN Agro (over 3,000%), and Colab Platforms (over 2,200%), all of which saw FIIs build positions from scratch.

Sectoral Winners: Energy, Defence, and Technology

The data suggests that foreign capital is gravitating toward specific structural themes in the Indian economy, particularly power infrastructure, defence, and precision engineering.

Expert Outlook: Why FIIs Aren't Leaving India

Gli esperti di mercato sostengono che il selloff degli FII non debba essere interpretato come una mancanza di fiducia nell'India, ma come uno spostamento ciclico. Sailesh Raj Bhan, Equity CIO di Nippon India Mutual Fund, osserva che, nonostante anni di vendite, le valutazioni indiane non sono crollate, il che indica una forza sottostante. Egli indica la "struttura di crescita composta del PIL nominale dell'India superiore all'11%" come un magnete a lungo termine per il capitale.

Inoltre, gli analisti di BofA Securities e Morgan Stanley suggeriscono che, sebbene le banche a grande capitalizzazione siano attualmente "depresse", le opportunità di crescita si stanno spostando verso temi di consumo discrezionale (gioielli, viaggi), investimenti legati ai data center (cavi, trasformatori) e il ciclo globale di capex dell'IA (metalli non ferrosi come rame e alluminio).

Punti Chiave