Mumbai: Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI) has risen several folds since the Indian economy started to open up. While the FPI inflow has powered markets to record highs on several occasions, some experts say India's dependence on them has also left the economy exposed to global shocks such as trade war.
Rating firm Ind-Ra in a recent report said that "India's increased dependence on foreign portfolio investment (FPI) makes the country highly vulnerable to global shocks. As the FPI inflows are fickle in nature, they can be quite destabilising for the exchange rate and the overall economy".
It also added that the surplus generated in the services trade combined with remittances is insufficient to cover India's trade deficit owing to which the country has been witnessing Current Account Deficit (CAD).
"Even the net Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) which is part of the capital account is insufficient to bridge the CAD. Since the current account plus net FDI is negative, India is dependent on FPI, the other major component of the capital account, to fund this gap. The current account plus net FDI has been positive for some of India's peers such as China, Brazil and Russia", the report added.