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India Inc’s Investment In Foreign Units Falls 39% In September 

India Inc had invested $1.34 billion in their overseas ventures in August 2017.



A businessman holds a briefcase and smartphone as he passes a bank (Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg)
A businessman holds a briefcase and smartphone as he passes a bank (Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg)

India Inc’s investment in overseas ventures fell by nearly 39.3 percent to $ 2.65 billion in September this year, according to the RBI data released today. Domestic companies had committed $4.37 billion as outward foreign direct investment in the year-ago period.

In August 2017, India Inc had invested $1.34 billion in their overseas ventures that were either fully owned subsidiaries or joint ventures of the Indian parent companies.

The $2.65 billion worth of investment during September was in the form of equity stake, loans as well as issuance of guarantee by these Indian entities, the RBI said.

Of this, the highest portion of about $1.22 billion came in as guarantee issuance; followed by $1.06 billion as loan and $374.95 million was part of the equity holding.

Major investors include Tata Steel which put $ 858.29 million in a wholly owned subsidiary in Singapore; TCS which put in $356.29 million in its U.K. unit and Bharat Petroresources which committed a collective $164.60 million in its two fully owned units in the Netherlands and Singapore.

Chemicals, shipping and metal company Sanmar Group International invested $280 million in a wholly owned subsidiary in Switzerland. Government-owned Gail India invested a combined $101.50 million in the U.S.-based wholly owned company and Myanmar-based joint venture company while Wipro put $ 79.52 million in U.K.-based wholly owned firm.