As stock markets globally went into a tailspin
taking a $2.5-trillion hit within hours of the Brexit verdict, retail investors
in India took a contrarian call by turning net buyers to purchase shares worth
Rs 118 crore - the highest for a day so far this fiscal year.
What has come to be known as
a Black Friday for the markets worldwide, the day of Brexit referendum results
on June 24 saw the stocks plunge sharply everywhere, including in India, where
the benchmark Sensex lost nearly 1,100 points intraday before closing the day
with a 605-point crash.
In the process, the total
investor wealth took a hit of nearly Rs 1.8 lakh crore in the Indian stock
market while the overall loss for world markets is estimated at around $2.5
trillion for the day.
Post-trading data released
by the stock exchanges show that the foreign investors sold heavily while
brokers also remained net sellers in their proprietary accounts.
However, domestic
institutions, including state-run and private sector insurers as also domestic mutual
funds, pitched in to shore up the markets from their lows and remained net
buyers to the tune of Rs 115 crore.
However, the biggest
surprise, as per the stock exchanges' data, was the retail investors who trade
as clients of brokers with a net purchase higher than that of the domestic
institutional investors (DIIs).
These clients bought shares
worth Rs 1,723.47 crore while their sales were to the tune of Rs 1,605.72 crore
- making them a net buyer with Rs 117.74 crore.
This is the highest in over three
months since March 23, when they made a net purchase of Rs 150 crore. Besides,
it has been very rare in the recent past that the retail investors have made a
net purchase of over Rs 100 crore in a single day - only four such occasions so
far in the current fiscal year.
The retail Indian investors
were also joined by NRIs, who also made a net purchase of Rs 1.22 crore during
the day.
In comparison, the brokers
themselves seem to have played safe with a net sale of Rs 5.54 crore as they
squared off most of their positions after buying shares worth Rs 851 crore.
The foreign portfolio
investors were undoubtedly heavy sellers. They bought shares worth Rs 3,865.55
crore and sold Rs 4,494.69 crore worth shares - resulting in a net sale of Rs
629.14 crore.
Indian markets are heavily
dominated by foreign investors as they command over 21 per cent of total shares
available for trading while that of domestic institutions is just about 8 per
cent. While promoters own an estimated over 50 per cent, retail investors -
including small individual shareholders and HNIs - are estimated to have over
10 per cent. The rest are owned by corporate bodies, trusts and others.
The total number of
investors in Indian markets is over three crores, but it is a few thousands of foreign
investors whose trading calls mostly move the shares. Therefore, large-scale
buying by Indian investors could not save the Indian stock market from the
heavy plunge, post-Brexit.
Credit:NDTV
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