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Billions of Dollars May Come for India Stocks After Rule Tweak

The Indian stock market is set to see billions of dollars of inflows after a policy tweak comes into effect on April 1.

Billions of Dollars May Come for India Stocks After Rule Tweak
U.S. 100 dollar notes are stacked at the Korea Exchange Bank headquarters in Seoul, South Korea. (Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The Indian stock market is set to see billions of dollars of inflows after a policy tweak comes into effect on April 1, analysts predict.

The nation will increase the foreign portfolio investment limit in a company from the current 24% to a higher threshold set for its sector. In addition to the expected inflows from active asset managers, the move could trigger net investments of between $2 billion and $2.5 billion to Indian equities from passive funds, according to estimates from Target Investing and Morgan Stanley.

The change will likely increase India’s weighting in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index by about 70 basis points, according to the two brokers, compared with 8.6% as of last month. The inflows will add to the demand that has driven Indian stocks to record highs just as the pace of economic growth has slumped to its lowest in a decade.

Billions of Dollars May Come for India Stocks After Rule Tweak

The benchmark S&P BSE Sensex Index dropped 0.3% in volatile trading on Wednesday. Foreign investors injected $1.7 billion into India’s stock market this year as of Jan. 20, the most since November, helping the benchmark touch fresh highs earlier this month.

Global index compilers such as MSCI Inc. take into account the percentage of shares available to investors when determining a stock’s representation in equity gauges. MSCI’s next semi-annual review will happen on May 12 and will be effective from June 1, according to its website. A spokeswoman for the index provider declined to comment.

India’s maximum permissible investment limit differs across sectors. For example, foreign investors can hold only up to 49% in an insurance company, while they can own 100% in a coal miner.

Unless companies pass resolutions to keep the foreign portfolio investment limit at 24%, all firms in India will irreversibly have their threshold lifted to the sector’s cap after April 1, Morgan Stanley strategists including Sheela Rathi and Ridham Desai wrote in a note last month.

The stage is set for India’s weight to rise in MSCI Emerging Markets Index, the note added.

--With assistance from Zhen Hao Toh.

To contact the reporter on this story: Abhishek Vishnoi in Singapore at avishnoi4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lianting Tu at ltu4@bloomberg.net, Cecile Vannucci

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