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BUSINESS & TRADE MAY 15, 2026 | The Indian Eye 36
India’s New Economic Challenge:
Capital Flight and the AI Divide
Foreign investors are pulling billions from Indian markets as the global AI boom reshapes
capital flows, exposing structural vulnerabilities in Asia’s third-largest economy
OUR BUREAU
New Delhi / Mumbai
ndia’s economy is confronting a difficult new
reality. The challenge is no longer simply about
Iinflation, oil prices or fiscal deficits. Instead, the
country now faces twin pressures that could shape
its economic trajectory for years: sustained foreign
capital outflows and the disruptive impact of the
global artificial intelligence boom.
The irony is striking. India remains one of the
world’s fastest-growing major economies, domes-
tic investors continue to pour money into equities,
and corporate India still benefits from strong long-
term consumption trends. Yet global investors are
increasingly looking elsewhere.
According to a Goldman Sachs strategy report
titled Outflows Fade, But Re-entry Waits, foreign
institutional investors (FIIs) have already sold USD
22 billion worth of Indian equities in 2026, surpass-
ing the previous annual sell-off record of USD 19 The global AI boom has fundamentally altered investor behaviour (ANI File Photo)
billion set in 2025. Since the market peak in Sep-
tember 2024, cumulative foreign selling has reached
a staggering USD 53 billion. per cent in dollar terms. Yet the situation is more complicated than
The result has been historic. “Foreign owner- “The divergence is structural,” the brokerage headline numbers suggest.
ship in equities dropped to a 14-year low in 1Q CY26, observed. “India’s lower exposure to AI hardware Motilal Oswal argued that India’s broader mar-
and slipped below domestic institutions for the first and the narrow, concentrated nature of the global ket remains relatively resilient once the IT sector
time in over two decades,” Goldman Sachs noted. AI rally have limited participation.” is excluded. Domestic investors, especially mutual
That shift marks a structural turning point in This exposes a major weakness in India’s eco- funds and pension flows, have emerged as a power-
Indian markets. For decades, foreign capital served nomic story. For years, the country positioned itself ful stabilising force.
as a major driver of India’s stock market expansion as a technology powerhouse through software ser- Domestic institutional investors invested USD
and global financial integration. Today, domestic vices and digital innovation. But the AI revolution 5.4 billion in a single month, marking the twelfth
institutional investors are increasingly carrying the is currently rewarding countries dominating semi- consecutive month of inflows above USD 5 billion.
burden of sustaining market stability. conductor fabrication, memory chips and advanced Systematic Investment Plans (SIPs) continue at-
The reasons behind the exodus are not difficult hardware manufacturing — areas where India re- tracting steady retail participation, while pension
to identify. Indian equities continue to trade at premi- mains relatively weak. funds are adding significant equity exposure.
um valuations compared to many Asian peers, while Jefferies described the trend as a “reverse AI There is, however, a possible opening.
earnings visibility has weakened amid slowing glob- trade,” which has reduced India’s weighting in the Motilal Oswal suggested that the AI trade may
al demand and geopolitical uncertainty. Goldman MSCI Emerging Markets Index from 19.5 per cent eventually become overstretched. “With AI trade
Sachs bluntly stated that India currently offers a “less to around 11.5 per cent since early last year. Mean- having run for an extended period, any potential
attractive risk/reward” than North Asian markets. while, Korea and Taiwan have gained weight be- unwinding or rotation could redirect FII flows to-
But the deeper issue lies in artificial intelligence. cause investors increasingly see them as central to ward structurally strong domestic growth markets
The global AI boom has fundamentally altered the AI supply chain. like India,” the report stated.
investor behaviour. Markets with strong exposure The numbers explain why. Jefferies noted that The danger for India is not immediate collapse.
to semiconductor manufacturing, AI hardware and Samsung and SK Hynix alone are forecast to gen- The economy remains large, dynamic and domesti-
advanced technology infrastructure — particularly erate profits of USD 307 billion this year — three cally resilient. The greater risk is slower irrelevance
South Korea, Taiwan and the United States — have times the combined forecast profits of India’s Nifty in a world where global capital increasingly rewards
become magnets for global capital. 50 companies. countries positioned at the centre of the AI revolution.
According to Motilal Oswal Financial Services, In many ways, India is becoming a victim of glob- For now, India stands caught between two pow-
India’s underperformance against major global mar- al capital concentration. Investors chasing AI-driv- erful forces: foreign money leaving and artificial
kets since 2024 has been “largely driven by global AI en growth are crowding into a handful of markets intelligence reshaping the global investment map.
trade.” South Korea has risen 53 per cent in USD closely tied to semiconductors and advanced com- How the country responds may determine whether
terms in 2026 so far, Taiwan 33 per cent and Brazil puting infrastructure. India, despite its strong do- it remains a rising economic power — or becomes a
28 per cent. India’s Nifty, by contrast, declined 13 mestic economy, simply lacks equivalent exposure. spectator in the next technological era.
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