What is the story about?
Domestic institutional investors (DIIs), who bought a record ₹8 lakh crore worth of shares last year and have consistently absorbed foreign selling, turned net sellers for the second consecutive trading session on Sunday. DIIs sold equities worth ₹683 crore during the session, following a sale of ₹601 crore on Friday. This took their total selling over the two days to nearly ₹1,300 crore.
Sunday’s selling marked the first instance since 27 June 2025 that DIIs remained net sellers for two consecutive sessions. In contrast, overseas investors purchased equities worth about ₹1,600 crore over the last two trading sessions, according to data compiled from exchanges. The average daily buying by DIIs over the past three months stands at ₹3,800 crore.
The selling pressure comes in the wake of the government’s proposal to increase taxes on equity derivatives, which unsettled market sentiment. DIIs, along with retail investors and high-net-worth individuals, have otherwise been playing a strong counterbalancing role to persistent selling by foreign portfolio investors (FPIs).
The proposal to raise the securities transaction tax (STT) on equity futures to 0.05% from 0.02% triggered sharp volatility in the market. The benchmark Nifty 50 index fell nearly 2%, marking its worst Budget-day decline since 2020. Shares of BSE Ltd plunged about 8%, while capital-market-linked stocks such as Angel One and Nuvama Wealth Management declined between 7% and 9%.
Market participants said the move is aimed at curbing speculative trading after a surge in retail participation made India the world’s largest derivatives market by contracts traded.
“The measured increase in STT on futures and options reflects a clear intent to curb excessive speculation, fostering a more stable market and encouraging sustainable participation from long-term retail and institutional investors,” said Vishal Kampani, Vice Chairman and Managing Director of JM Financial Ltd.
According to a Ministry of Finance official, the higher STT on equity futures and options is expected to generate approximately ₹15,000 crore in additional annual revenue for the government.
So far in 2026, local institutional investors — including mutual funds and insurance companies — have bought equities worth ₹68,538 crore. In comparison, foreign portfolio investors have sold around ₹30,000 crore worth of equities so far this year, after offloading a substantial ₹1.7 lakh crore in 2025.
Sunday’s selling marked the first instance since 27 June 2025 that DIIs remained net sellers for two consecutive sessions. In contrast, overseas investors purchased equities worth about ₹1,600 crore over the last two trading sessions, according to data compiled from exchanges. The average daily buying by DIIs over the past three months stands at ₹3,800 crore.
The selling pressure comes in the wake of the government’s proposal to increase taxes on equity derivatives, which unsettled market sentiment. DIIs, along with retail investors and high-net-worth individuals, have otherwise been playing a strong counterbalancing role to persistent selling by foreign portfolio investors (FPIs).
The proposal to raise the securities transaction tax (STT) on equity futures to 0.05% from 0.02% triggered sharp volatility in the market. The benchmark Nifty 50 index fell nearly 2%, marking its worst Budget-day decline since 2020. Shares of BSE Ltd plunged about 8%, while capital-market-linked stocks such as Angel One and Nuvama Wealth Management declined between 7% and 9%.
Market participants said the move is aimed at curbing speculative trading after a surge in retail participation made India the world’s largest derivatives market by contracts traded.
“The measured increase in STT on futures and options reflects a clear intent to curb excessive speculation, fostering a more stable market and encouraging sustainable participation from long-term retail and institutional investors,” said Vishal Kampani, Vice Chairman and Managing Director of JM Financial Ltd.
According to a Ministry of Finance official, the higher STT on equity futures and options is expected to generate approximately ₹15,000 crore in additional annual revenue for the government.
So far in 2026, local institutional investors — including mutual funds and insurance companies — have bought equities worth ₹68,538 crore. In comparison, foreign portfolio investors have sold around ₹30,000 crore worth of equities so far this year, after offloading a substantial ₹1.7 lakh crore in 2025.
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