Foreign investors buy India’s IT, pharma stocks in August on US rate outlook

BENGALURU (Reuters) – Foreign investors scooped up information technology and pharma stocks in August, which earn a significant share of their revenue from the U.S., on the prospect of a likely rate cut this month by the Federal Reserve, according to data on Thursday.

Foreign portfolio investors (FPI) also loaded up on consumer stocks, driven by earnings momentum and hopes of demand revival due to steady monsoons in India, data from the National Securities Depository Ltd (NSDL) showed.

After pumping in 117.63 billion rupees ($1.40 billion) on IT stocks in July, the highest since a new sectoral classification was implemented in 2022, FPIs purchased IT shares worth 40.36 billion rupees last month and also bought healthcare stocks worth 51.99 billion rupees.

Buoyed by FPI inflows, the IT and pharma sub-indexes in August rose 4.7% and 6.6%, respectively, while FMCG index gained 1.6%, leading the benchmark Nifty 50 1.1% higher.

Recent hopes of increased technology-related spending in the U.S. amid expectations of a soft landing for the economy spurred foreign interest in IT and pharma stocks, according to VK Vijayakumar, chief investment strategist, Geojit Financial Services.

Consumer durables, consumer services and fast-moving consumer goods saw FPI inflows between 36 billion rupees and 50 billion rupees in August.

Bets of rural demand revival and steady macroeconomic outlook triggered renewed interest in consumption-linked sectors, according to two analysts.

“The silver lining is private consumption growth, which is showing signs of revival and reflecting in the strong earnings performance in the sector in June quarter,” said Ajit Banerjee, chief investment officer at Shriram Life Insurance.

“Monsoon progressing well also keeps the hope alive of a good agricultural output and could lead to improvement of rural demand,” Banerjee added.

Supported by rising expectations of a U.S. rate cut in September, overall FPI inflows in Indian equities turned positive for August, reversing outflows in the first half of the month.

($1 = 83.9530 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Bharath Rajeswaran in Bengaluru; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips)