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The Economic Times
The Economic Times
Nikhil Agarwal

Nifty in control of FIIs? The unlucky 13 bluechips facing the hardest institutional selloff

Since September 2024, foreign institutional investors (FIIs) have systematically dismantled their stakes in 43 out of 50 Nifty stocks, flattening the benchmark’s two-year return to zero and exposing a stark reality that when global capital flees, even India’s ultimate bluechips bleed.

The shareholding pattern reveals that the damage is concentrated at the very top. High-flying consumer discretionary favorites, tech giants, and heavy-weight private lenders have all been hit by the institutional retreat, with a select group of 13 major companies bearing the brunt of the selling between September 2024 and March 2026.

Trent leads the carnage as FII holding has collapsed from 26.62% to 15.59%. The stock has fallen 51% from its all-time high. Eternal, formerly Zomato, saw foreign ownership nearly halve in proportional terms down from 52.53% to 32.61%, a nearly 20-percentage-point exit. It trades 33% below its peak. TCS, India's IT bellwether, has shed nearly a quarter of its FII ownership, now at 9.66%, and sits 53% off its all-time high.

The list reads like a who's who of India Inc. Bajaj Auto, ICICI Bank, UltraTech Cement, Dr. Reddy's, Cipla, Tech Mahindra, Max Healthcare, Asian Paints, Maruti Suzuki — all have seen FII stakes fall by more than 20% in relative terms. The sell-off has not been sector-specific but a broad and sustained retreat across several quarters.

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