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Why foreign capital is fleeing India

1

WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

THIS AFTERNOON: India proposes source-code disclosure rules for smartphone makers

Good afternoon, friends, and a happy Monday. Today’s issue covers new highs and lows — from investments to energy.

The big story today: Foreign portfolio investors marked a record sell-off in Indian equities in 2025. We break down why foreigners are fleeing from Indian equities even as domestic investors remain bullish. FPI pullback is more about global cycles and valuations rather than a verdict on India’s growth story, Vaqarjaved Khan, a senior market analyst, told us in an exclusive interview.

ALSO- The Indian government is drafting policies that could force smartphone makers to reveal their source code, a move without global precedent. This is the latest battle that big tech firms will have to fight out in the closed rooms of New Delhi’s power corridors.

All of that and more, below.

POLICY — India is escalating a regulatory battle with big tech, proposing new security rules that would force smartphone giants like Apple and Samsung to hand over their proprietary source code to government labs for review, Reuters reports, citing anonymous sources.

The details: Apart from the source code disclosure, among the 83 security standards proposed is a requirement to notify the government before upcoming software updates and to store security logs on the device for a year. The draft rules also propose barring inactive apps from accessing the camera, location, and microphones in the background, as well as providing options to remove pre-installed apps, according to another Reuters report.

Pushback: Manufacturers argue the demands, which include a requirement to store 12 months of security logs locally on the device, are technically impossible and lack global precedent. Industry body MAIT has warned the government that requirements like continuous malware scanning would destroy battery life and hardware performance, while source code disclosure violates global privacy and secrecy policies..

Why it matters: This regulatory move shifts the goalpost from data localization to IP transparency (how the device works). If India succeeds in mandating source code review and government pre-approval for security patches, it sets a template for other security-conscious regulators, including those in the MENA region, to demand similar access to proprietary software.

What’s next: Consultations between tech companies and the government are ongoing, but the Indian government has in the past revoked regulatory proposals, including one to pre-install an undeletable government app on new smartphones, following public backlash and industry pushback.


MANUFACTURING — Reliance Industries has put the brakes on its plans to manufacture lithium-ion battery cells after failing to secure critical Chinese technology, Bloomberg reports, citing anonymous sources. The move underscores a widening reality for India’s green energy transition — while capital is available, the intellectual property in key industries remains locked in Beijing.

What happened: Reliance had been in talks with China’s Xiamen Hithium to license cell technology, but the deal collapsed amid Beijing’s tightening restrictions on overseas tech transfers. Without access to proven Chinese IP, Reliance concluded that domestic manufacturing would be too costly and risky.

Why it matters: This exposes the limits of the “Make in India” push for renewables. Despite government incentives — including a USD 2 bn Production Linked Incentive scheme that Reliance had initially tapped — Indian conglomerates are discovering that they cannot log substantial progress on independent supply chains without cooperation from China. With the world awash in cheap Chinese batteries, the economic logic currently favors buying from the incumbent rather than trying to beat them.

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Data point

4.8 mn tonnes — This was India’s finished-steel export volume between April and December, a 33% y-o-y increase that made the country a net exporter for the period, Reuters reports, citing provisional government data. Imports were slightly lower at 4.65 mn tonnes, while output reached 117.6 mn tonnes and consumption 119.3 mn tonnes.

Tariff context: India imposed a 12% import tariff on some steel products in December to limit the inflow of cheaper shipments, mainly from China. The levy will taper to 11.5% in 2025 and 11% in 2026, the newswire reports.

Why it matters:The pickup in Indian steel exports comes as infrastructure activity across the GCC remains elevated, with the region’s pre-execution project pipeline — led by construction and transport — estimated at about USD 1.78 tn.

Happening this week

Europe is at the top of India’s diplomatic agenda this week, with senior leaders from Germany, France, and Poland holding meetings with Indian officials in the run-up to the 27 January India-EU summit, Economic Times reports. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Ahmedabad today to review cooperation in trade, investment, mobility, defence, and clean energy.

France and Poland: France will dispatch diplomatic adviser Emmanuel Bonne to prepare for President Emmanuel Macron’s February visit, while Polish Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski will discuss collaboration in electric vehicles, green hydrogen, renewables, mining, and urban infrastructure. These are sectors where Gulf sovereign wealth funds, including Adia, Mubadala, and Saudi Arabia’s PIF, have active investment pipelines in India alongside European institutions.

The big story abroad

Keep a close eye on how markets open this morning: US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is facing a criminal probe over the renovation of the Fed’s headquarters in Washington, DC, the New York Times reports in an exclusive, citing people briefed on the matter. Investigators are looking into whether he lied about the scope of the renovation, the costs of which had reached USD 2.5 bn this year, up from an initial estimate of USD 1.9 bn.

US President Donald Trump has long attacked Powell and pushed him to drive interest rates lower and has frequently complained about the renovations, including in a famous video (watch, runtime: 3:17) last year during his tour of the HQ.

Powell, in a video statement (watch, runtime: 2:55), claimed the renovation issue was a “pretext” and that the threat of criminal charges is a “consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President,” explaining that they come against the backdrop of wider threats and pressure from Trump against the Fed over the past months.

IN CONTEXT- This is the sharpest attack on the Fed’s independence in generations. Powell is leaving his post in May, and Trump has said he’s already chosen — but has not announced — the successor, widely expected to be Kevin Hassett, the director of the National Economic Council.

REMEMBER- Powell is leaving his post in May, and Trump has said he’s already chosen his successor, who’s widely expected to be Kevin Hassett, the director of the National Economic Council.

Meanwhile, in Iran, protests have intensified despite an ongoing crackdown by the police, leading to around 500 deaths. Trump has several times said he was ready to come to the “rescue” of Iranians, prompting Iran’s speaker of parliament Mohammad Baqer Ghalibaf to warn the US against any interference. “Let us be clear: in the case of an attack on Iran, the occupied territories [Israel] as well as all US bases and ships will be our legitimate target,” he told parliament.

The US currently has several bases in the Gulf, including in Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Qatar, which was targeted last year in retaliation for the US’ attack on Iranian nuclear plants during its brief intervention in Israel’s war against Iran.

^^The must-read on the topic: Iranians defy intensifying crackdown as Trump weighs options

Flights between Iran and the UAE, as well as Iran and Qatar, faced disruptions over the weekend, with around 20 flights between Iran and Dubai facing cancellation, though Emirates and flydubai’s flights seem to have departed on schedule yesterday, the National reports.

PLUS- The US could start easing sanctions on Venezuela as soon as next week as the US looks to begin receiving oil from the country, while India is once again getting into it with tech firms due to its proposal to make smartphone makers share their phones’ source code with the government for security testing.

Circle your calendar

Check out our full calendar on the web for a comprehensive listing of upcoming news events, national holidays and news triggers.

2

THE BIG STORY TODAY

A 2026 outlook on Indian equities: Why the foreign investor selloff is contextual and not a verdict on India’s macros

FPI selloff isn’t a verdict, it’s a rotation: Foreign ownership of Indian equities slid to a 15-year low in 2025, but the selloff needs to be seen in the context of global capital cycles rather than any fundamental weakening in India, Vaqarjaved Khan, senior analyst at Angel One, told EnterpriseAM.

Crunching the numbers: Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPI) pulled out some INR 1.4 tn (USD 16.4 bn) from Indian equities in 2025, as per NSE’s latest Market Pulse Report. Meanwhile, domestic institutional investors (DIIs) pumped in more than INR 7 tn (USD 81.5 bn) in the same period.

Domestic capital has cushioned the impact, offsetting the FPI exits since 2022. Despite periodic risk-off pressure, India is relatively better placed due to its domestic demand orientation, policy stability and growth visibility.

What’s behind the selloff? Higher global interest rates, especially elevated US bond yields, and a strong USD have tilted global portfolios back toward developed markets, causing sustained FPI selloffs from emerging markets, Khan says. India’s sharp equity outperformance in recent years compounded the move, stirring valuation concerns in certain sectors and triggering outflows, particularly from export-oriented and cyclical sectors such as IT and energy.

Global investors are selectively rotating away from emerging-market equities, Khan explains, limiting their exposure to fiscally weaker, externally vulnerable, and commodity-dependent economies rather than exiting the asset class wholesale.

Volatility in FPI flows is expected to persist into early 2026, Khan observes, noting a medium-term supportive environment for a gradual return of investors, as global rates peak before they begin to ease and Indian earnings broaden.

Who gains? Large-cap stocks with strong balance sheets and predictable cashflows are likely to be the first beneficiaries, he adds. Any meaningful valuation corrections or periods of market consolidation could further improve the risk-reward ratio for foreign investors.

Gulf capital plays the long game in India

Gulf investor offices are highly likely to increase their India allocations in 2026 due to the Gulf’s ample liquidity and a strategic diversification away from hydrocarbons, as India offers a compelling momentum of scale, growth, and policy continuity, Khan said.

Gulf investors are showing up with patience, approaching India as a “strategic, long-duration growth market rather than a tactical trading [play],” Khan said, pointing to their sustained interest in infrastructure, financial services, energy transition, and consumption, and that they are less prone to being rattled by short-term market volatility. This is reflected in the recent deployments of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, which has been active in recent Indian IPOs and long-term themes.

Financials remain the core wager of the FPI portfolio over the last five years, accounting for roughly 34.2% — reinforcing global interest in the sector including from the Gulf investors. Meanwhile, FPI interest in the consumer sector has nearly doubled, rising from 7.3% to 12.7% in five years.

What’s changing? Global investors increasingly view India’s long-term growth being driven by domestic engines rather than export-led cycles alone, according to Khan. FPI allocation mirrors this structural shift — drifting away from globally cyclical sectors and valuation-sensitive sectors like IT and energy to domestic themes such as industrials, consumption, and utilities.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

3

INVESTMENT WATCH

Foreign state investments in India dropped 75% y-o-y in 2025 amid pullback from Gulf allocators

Investments in India by state-owned investors (SOI), including sovereign wealth funds, fell more than 70% y-o-y in 2025 as global capital pivoted toward developed markets, as per Global SWF’s annual report. While global SOI investments grew 32% to USD 278 bn in 2025, India’s share of that pie collapsed to just 2% from 9.5% in 2024, dropping to USD 5.7 bn from USD 20 bn.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

The pullback was sharpest among Gulf funds, with investments in 2025 sliding to USD 1.38 bn from USD 4.32 bn in 2024. The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority invested USD 916 mn, down from USD 2.19 bn. Mubadala and the Kuwait Investment Authority, which collectively put nearly USD 2 bn into India in 2024, made no reported India moves. Global SWF said high rates, geopolitics, and a US-heavy allocation cycle drove the shift.

Plans not yet realized: Mubadala announced plans to double its Asia exposure to 25% over the next decade, yet it made zero reported investments in India in 2025. Despite policy pushes like Gujarat’s investor-friendly business district Gift City, where major investors (Adia, PIF) have set up offices, they are reportedly waiting for “actionable, investable” avenues to actually deploy capital, Global SWF Founder Diego Lopez told Economic Times.

The American magnet: Approximately 50% of all global SOI capital (USD 132 bn) was deployed in the US in 2025, fueled by the AI boom and digital infrastructure.

What comes next: India is banking on its Gift City and PLI schemes to lure capital back. However, “boots on the ground” offices are not enough to compete with the high-yield, high-tech allure of the US, where AI development is attracting record investments. Investors should watch for whether the next crop of Indian Infrastructure Investment Trusts can offer the scale needed to bring Gulf allocators back to the table.

4

IPO WATCH

Jio Platforms listing awaiting regulatory changes allowing 2.5% public float

Jio Platforms, the Gulf SWF-backed digital and telecom subsidiary of Reliance Industries, is evaluating the sale of a 2.5% stake through an IPO that could be potentially worth USD 4 bn, Reuters reports, citing sources familiar with the discussions. Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (Adia), Mubadala, and Saudi Arabia’s PIF have invested bns in Jio Platforms. Although existing foreign investors are expected to mark an exit through the IPO, it is not known if the Gulf investors will sell their stakes.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

Regulatory hurdle: For the IPO to proceed, Reliance has to wait for regulatory changes to take effect. Current rules require companies to list a minimum 5% stake to proceed with a listing. While the market regulator, Sebi, has cleared a proposal for lowering the minimum public float for large firms to 2.5% from 5%, the change is yet to be approved by the Finance Ministry, the newswire reports.

Preliminary IPO details: Jio is preparing for a listing in 1H 2026, subject to market conditions and regulatory approvals. Jefferies valued the company at USD 180 bn in November 2025; at that valuation, a 2.5% sale would raise around USD 4.5 bn.

Advisers: Morgan Stanley and Kotak Mahindra Bank are assisting Reliance with initial documentation and the draft prospectus. The full syndicate has not yet been appointed.

5

ENERGY

India’s record fuel exports highlight the country’s position as a global refining hub

India’s refined fuel exports hit a record high in 2025 amid Western sanctions on Russian oil imports and Red Sea disruptions, solidifying India’s position as a critical global midstream hub for crude suppliers, including Gulf firms.

Fuel shipments rose to 1.28 mn barrels per day (bpd), up 4% y-o-y, making up a tenth of India’s merchandise exports by value, Business Standard reports, citing Kpler data. Exports in value terms reached USD 52 bn in January-November with India’s growing role as a swing supplier to Asia and Europe.

What’s changed? While India’s overall export volumes are up, Saudi Arabia and Iraq have halted crude supplies to Rosneft-backed Nayara Energy — once a top-tier customer — following EU sanctions on its Russian backers.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

Reliance leads, state refiner climbs: Reliance Industries dominated with exports of 911k bpd, or 71% of the total, while state-run Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals overtook Nayara Energy to become the second-largest exporter. Nayara’s exports fell 15% following EU sanctions, reshaping flows from the Gulf and Europe.

Why this matters: This has turned Nayara into a Russian-fed island, while its competitors, Reliance and MRPL, capture the lucrative European arbitrage. For Egypt, the data proves the Suez Canal remains the indispensable artery for refined products; high-margin fuels are transiting the informal blockade far more successfully than crude.

What’s next: As Indian state refiners add 380k bpd of new capacity this year, they are moving directly into the refined product space that Saudi Aramco and ADNOC intend to feedstock.

More capacity, export bias: New and expanded refineries will lift supply in diesel and jet fuel, reinforcing exports as India balances domestic demand with global arbitrage.

6

ALSO ON OUR RADAR

Saudia launches four-weekly Riyadh-Kozhikode flights

Saudia touches down in Kozhikode

Jeddah-based carrier Saudia expanded its network in India with the addition of Kozhikode city, launching four weekly flights from King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh to Calicut International Airport starting 1 February, it said in a press release. This marks the national carrier’s seventh destination in the South Asian country, joining its existing service to Bengaluru, Mumbai, Kochi, Delhi, Hyderabad, and Lucknow.

Why it matters: The expansion is a defensive play to lock in market share ahead of flyadeal’s planned launch in India in 1Q 2026. By securing slots in secondary Indian cities now, Saudia is optimizing its fleet to capture point-to-point traffic in a major market — leveraging its status as the world’s second most on-time airline to defend its “moat” against regional and Indian competitors.

Lenovo to make AI servers in India for export markets

Global technology major Lenovo will design and manufacture artificial-intelligence servers in India for export markets as part of its infrastructure solutions business, PTI reports, citing Lenovo VP and General Manager Scott Tease. The AI servers will be engineered at the company’s Bengaluru development lab and manufactured at its Pondicherry facility.

Why it matters? For India-MENA corridor investors, India’s emergence as an AI server export base adds another potential hardware supply node for fast-growing AI data center projects in the GCC, including large-scale capacity build-outs in the UAE and Saudi Arabia.

7

PLANET FINANCE

Wall Street gains on resilient labor data and shifting interest rate hopes

Wall Street closed the week at record levels on Friday as investors welcomed labor data that reinforced the broader narrative of a soft landing for 2026, even as it lowered the odds of an immediate interest rate cut in January. Investors rotated into housing, energy, and small-cap stocks, the Associated Press reported on Friday. The S&P 500 rose 0.6%, pushing past the record it set earlier in the week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.5%, while the Nasdaq Composite outperformed with a 0.8% rise. Smaller companies led the charge, with the Russell 2000 rising 4.6% for the week, outpacing the S&P 500’s 1.6% weekly gain.

The data — marking the first labor report to be issued on-time since the US government shutdown — sent mixed but reassuring signals. Nonfarm payrolls grew by only 50k, falling short of the 73k consensus forecast, yet the unemployment rate unexpectedly improved to 4.4%. The economy is now “slow to hire and slow to fire,” Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth, told CNBC, adding that the report carried “more good news than bad” for investors worried about an impending recession.

That resilience in unemployment was enough to cool expectations for near-term Fed easing. The probability of a rate cut at the US Federal Reserve’s January meeting fell to 5% from 11% a day earlier, CME Group data showed. Markets remain more confident about the longer horizon, still pricing in a 32% chance of two quarter-point cuts by the end of 2026.

Inflation keeps the Fed in wait-and-see mode: While lower rates could help sustain growth and support asset prices, they also risk fueling inflation, which remains above the Fed’s 2% target. “Until the data provide a clearer direction, a divided Fed is likely to stay that way,” Morgan Stanley Wealth Management Chief Economic Strategist Ellen Zentner said. “Lower rates are likely coming this year, but the markets may have to be patient,” she added.

(** Tap or click the headline above to read this story with all of the links to our background as well as external sources.)

Treasury yields reflect a market caught between near-term caution and long-term confidence. The two-year Treasury yield climbed to 3.53% from 3.49%, signalling expectations that the Fed will delay rate cuts amid steady labor conditions. At the same time, the 10-year yield slipped by two basis points to 4.167%, and the 30-year fell by four basis points to 4.814%. This divergence suggests investors believe inflation and growth will cool gradually rather than collapse, reinforcing the soft-landing narrative.

MARKETS THIS MORNING-

Last week’s positive close on Wall Street was pushing up Asia-Pacific markets, which were all in the green this morning in early trading. Japan’s Nikkei is closed today for a holiday. Meanwhile, it appears US stock markets will not extend their rally when the opening bell rings later today, with futures for the S&P 500, Dow Jones, and Nasdaq all trading down.

Sensex

83,791

+0.26% (YTD: -1.6%)

NIFTY 50

25,779

+0.37% (YTD: -1.5%)

ADX

9,984

-0.25% (YTD: -0.1%)

DFM

6,230

+0.07% (YTD: 3%)

Tadawul

10,716

+1% (YTD: +2.1%)

EGX30

43,209

+0.7% (YTD: +3.3%)

Boursa Kuwait

8,100

-0.3% (YTD: -1.6%)

QSE

11,147

+0.5% (YTD: +3.6%)

S&P 500

6,966

+0.6% (YTD: +1.7%)

FTSE 100

10,126

+0.02% (YTD: +1.9%)

Euro Stoxx 50

5,979

-0.3% (YTD: +3.5%)

Brent crude

USD 63

+0.5%

Natural gas (Nymex)

USD 3.2

+1.9%

Gold

USD 4595

+2%

BTC

USD 90,723

+0.08%

The values in the table above are listed according to the market position as of 3:30pm IST / 2pm GST.


2026

JANUARY

10-18 January (Saturday-Sunday): New Delhi World Book Fair, Pragati Madan, New Delhi.

12-13 January (Monday-Tuesday): German Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s first Official India Visit, Ahmedabad and Bengaluru.

19-20 January (Monday-Tuesday): International Crop Science Conference and Exhibition, Le Méridien Conference Center, Dubai.

26 January (Monday): Republic Day (Public Holiday).

27 January (Tuesday): India-EU Summit (to potentially finalize FTA), New Delhi.

27-30 January (Tuesday-Friday): India Energy Week, ONGC Advanced Training Institute, Goa.

30 January-1 February (Friday-Sunday): India Agri Expo, Ludhiana Exhibition Center, Punjab.

31 January (Saturday): Commencement of Budget Session 2026, Parliament of India, New Delhi.

FEBRUARY

1 February (Sunday): Union Budget 2026-27, Parliament of India, New Delhi.

3-6 February (Tuesday-Friday): ChemTech World Expo, Jio World Convention Center, Mumbai.

9-10 February (Monday-Tuesday): Pune International Business Summit (PIBS), SL Kirloskar Convention Center, JW Marriott, Pune.

14-18 February (Saturday-Wednesday): IHGF Delhi Fair (Spring), New Delhi.

19-20 February (Thursday-Friday): India-AI Impact Summit, Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.

25 February (Wednesday): World Sustainable Development Summit, Taj Palace, New Delhi.

27 February (Friday): First GDP growth data with revised 2022-23 base year.

MARCH

4 March (Wednesday): Holi (Public Holiday).

12 March (Thursday): ET Entrepreneur Summit & Awards, Bengaluru.

19-22 March (Thursday-Sunday): Bharat Urja Manthan – Global Energy Conclave, New Delhi.

20 March (Friday): Eid Al Fitr (Public Holiday).

23-25 March (Monday-Wednesday): Indiasoft: International IT Exhibition & Conference, New Delhi.

23-25 March (Monday-Wednesday): Smart Cities Expo, Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.

23-25 March (Monday-Wednesday): PlastiWorld India, Jio World Convention Center, Mumbai.

31 March (Tuesday): Mahavir Jayanti (Public Holiday).

Signposted to happen sometime in March 2026

  • Election Commission of India is expected to announce polling dates for elections in the states of Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal, Assam, and the union territory Puducherry.

APRIL

1 April-30 September (Wednesday-Wednesday): Census 2027 – Population Enumeration, nationwide.

3 April (Friday): Good Friday (Public Holiday).

23-25 April (Thursday-Saturday): Rail & Metro Technology Conclave, Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.

29 April-2 May (Wednesday-Saturday): Bharat Buildcon, Yashobhoomi, Dwarka, Delhi.

7-10 April (Tuesday-Friday), India Rubber Expo, ITPO, Pragati Maidan, Delhi.

MAY

1 May (Friday): Buddha Purnima (Public Holiday).

26 May (Tuesday): Eid Al Adha (Public Holiday).

JUNE

24-25 June (Wednesday-Thursday): India Homeland Security Expo, Bharat Mandapam, Pragati Maidan, New Delhi.

26 June (Friday): Muharram (Public Holiday).

Signposted to happen sometime in 1H 2026:

AUGUST

15 August (Saturday): Independence Day (Public Holiday).

26 August (Wednesday): Prophet Mohammad’s Birthday (Public Holiday).

OCTOBER

2 October (Friday): Gandhi Jayanti (Public Holiday).

20 October (Tuesday): Dussehra (Public Holiday).

NOVEMBER

24 November (Tuesday): Guru Nanak Jayanti (Public Holiday).

DECEMBER

8-11 December (Tuesday-Thursday), Expand North Star, Dubai.

25 December (Friday): Christmas Day (Public Holiday).

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