The week in charts: FPIs are back, net zero investment gap, rewiring crude purchases
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. From foreign portfolio investments (FPI) making a come back to India in February after the trade deal framework with the US, to India already diversifying its crude oil import sources, Niti Aayog flagging the projected gap in investments to achieve the net-zero carbon emission target by 2070, and easing unemployment in India—here’s a compilation of this week’s news in numbers.
Inflows return February is turning out to be a positive month for foreign portfolio investments (FPIs) in Indian equities as the country saw ₹18,771 crore worth of inflows until 12 February. This follows a sombre period of consistent outflows, with FPIs pulling out ₹62,000 crore in the previous three months.
This signals a shift in sentiment, especially amid a wave of economic optimism over an India-US trade deal in the works. In 2025, India saw net inflows in four months—April, May, June, and October. The year was marked by massive outflows of nearly ₹1.6 trillion, driven by weak currency performance, tariff uncertainty and valuation concerns.
As part of the India-US trade deal framework, the US has claimed New Delhi has committed to halting oil imports from Russia. India has yet to give clarity on the issue though foreign secretary Vikram Misri said on Monday that India aims to maintain multiple sources of crude supply to ensure stability. Since the Russia-Ukraine war, as crude oil from Moscow came with heavy discounts, India increased its purchases from 2% of total imports in FY22 to 35% in FY25.
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