Determinants and Impact of Foreign Institutional Investors: An Indian Perspective

Growth of Indian economy is a bit shy of 9% mark. The latter is a rough guide which the foreign investors reckon with, before committing large sums of money for investment. India is one of the biggest and fastest growing developing economies and has attracted the most investor attention in recent ye...

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Main Author: Jain, Puneet
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2007
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21221/
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author Jain, Puneet
author_facet Jain, Puneet
author_sort Jain, Puneet
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Growth of Indian economy is a bit shy of 9% mark. The latter is a rough guide which the foreign investors reckon with, before committing large sums of money for investment. India is one of the biggest and fastest growing developing economies and has attracted the most investor attention in recent years. After liberalization of the Indian economy in 1991, it has become one of the hotspots for global investment. Foreign investment (both Foreign Direct Investment and Foreign Institutional Investment) helped to boost India's economic growth and transformed several sectors of the Indian Industry into globally competitive entities India is also the world's second fastest growing economy and boasts of highly competitive private companies, a booming stock market, and a modern, well-disciplined financial sector. The Indian stock markets witnessed unprecedented buoyancy during 2006-07 (Dalal Street, 2006). Strong macro-economic fundamentals, positive investment climate and sound business outlook drove the bullish trend. The results show that the industry has recorded a robust growth during this time period and has created great opportunities for investment. Further, the research compares India with four other leading developing countries (Brazil, Russia, China and South Africa) during 2006-07 and concludes that India is one of the fastest rising stars among all these major emerging economies with its economic growth rate running at over 9% annually.(Economic Times, Feb 2007). In order to tap the true potential of the economy, the Indian Government and financial community need to be pro-active in promoting the country as a safe destination for foreign capital, while at the same time ensuring that the vital interests of the economy are not adversely affected.
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spelling nottingham-212212018-03-28T15:44:57Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21221/ Determinants and Impact of Foreign Institutional Investors: An Indian Perspective Jain, Puneet Growth of Indian economy is a bit shy of 9% mark. The latter is a rough guide which the foreign investors reckon with, before committing large sums of money for investment. India is one of the biggest and fastest growing developing economies and has attracted the most investor attention in recent years. After liberalization of the Indian economy in 1991, it has become one of the hotspots for global investment. Foreign investment (both Foreign Direct Investment and Foreign Institutional Investment) helped to boost India's economic growth and transformed several sectors of the Indian Industry into globally competitive entities India is also the world's second fastest growing economy and boasts of highly competitive private companies, a booming stock market, and a modern, well-disciplined financial sector. The Indian stock markets witnessed unprecedented buoyancy during 2006-07 (Dalal Street, 2006). Strong macro-economic fundamentals, positive investment climate and sound business outlook drove the bullish trend. The results show that the industry has recorded a robust growth during this time period and has created great opportunities for investment. Further, the research compares India with four other leading developing countries (Brazil, Russia, China and South Africa) during 2006-07 and concludes that India is one of the fastest rising stars among all these major emerging economies with its economic growth rate running at over 9% annually.(Economic Times, Feb 2007). In order to tap the true potential of the economy, the Indian Government and financial community need to be pro-active in promoting the country as a safe destination for foreign capital, while at the same time ensuring that the vital interests of the economy are not adversely affected. 2007 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21221/1/07MAlixpj9.pdf Jain, Puneet (2007) Determinants and Impact of Foreign Institutional Investors: An Indian Perspective. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Jain, Puneet
Determinants and Impact of Foreign Institutional Investors: An Indian Perspective
title Determinants and Impact of Foreign Institutional Investors: An Indian Perspective
title_full Determinants and Impact of Foreign Institutional Investors: An Indian Perspective
title_fullStr Determinants and Impact of Foreign Institutional Investors: An Indian Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Determinants and Impact of Foreign Institutional Investors: An Indian Perspective
title_short Determinants and Impact of Foreign Institutional Investors: An Indian Perspective
title_sort determinants and impact of foreign institutional investors: an indian perspective
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21221/