Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) have been one of the key players in India’s stock market for quite some time now. FII activity tends to drive the performance of the stock market and give signals on how the rest of the world views India’s growth story. However, the year 2026 is witnessing a change in the story, as the FIIs are no longer rushing into the market but rather exiting the market at an unprecedented rate while still holding concentrated bets in certain companies.
This guide will shed light on the 20 most popular FII-owned companies in India, explain which sectors the foreign money is concentrated in, and, most importantly, define “FII favorites.”

FIIs Are Selling, Not Buying, India in 2026
Before we move onto individual stock holdings, it is important to be aware of the landscape in which these investments have been made. During the period from January 2024 to December 2025, foreign institutional investors sold shares amounting to more than $46 billion, bringing down foreign portfolio investment in companies listed at NSE to 16.9%, the lowest since more than 15 years ago. The sales have not stopped there; during the first five months of 2026, the FIIs were able to withdraw more money than they did all through 2025.
This marks another record: it is for the first time that the Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs), who include the Indian mutual funds, insurers, and pension funds, are owning a greater stake in Indian equities than the FIIs.
The reason for this shift in preference can be attributed to global institutions pulling out their investments in favor of the hardware supply chain of AI in Northeast Asia and even South Korea and Brazil.
Why does this matter? It affects your understanding of “FII favorites” list. Actually there are two types of such lists, both of which are interesting:
- Companies in which FIIs have the maximum rupee investment – mostly big cap companies of India as their shares are held significantly by foreign funds due to them being index components.
- Companies in which FIIs have the highest proportionate equity share – smaller and new economy companies in which foreign holding is disproportionately high as compared to the size of the company.
Both are important but as we will talk about the core holdings list of FIIs, so here we go…
What FIIs Look for in Indian Stocks
In various market cycles, certain factors always draw foreign investment into Indian stocks:
- Leading presence in a large and growing industry segment
- Better and clearer corporate governance practices
- Consistent earnings growth with visibility about the future
- Sufficient trading liquidity, where the large fund can trade in and out of the stock without any price effect
- Globe or export revenue, which makes them less reliant on the domestic market cycle
- Higher ROE compared to their competitors
- Lower debt levels and good free cash flows
Companies with multiple such factors are regularly found in the list of institutional ownership despite the general condition of the FII inflows.
The 20 Favorite FII Stocks in India
Banking & Financial Services
- HDFC Bank – This largest private sector bank in India continues to be a consistent favorite for the FII’s due to its consistent track record in earning profits, prudent underwriting, and scale advantages in retail and corporate banking.
- ICICI Bank – This bank with its strong loan growth and profit margins, and a diversified portfolio of loans, has been a top performer among foreign institutional investors’ favorites as seen with GQG Partners.
- Axis Bank – With its continued asset quality improvements and growing retail franchise, the bank continues to feature on the radar screens of institutional investors despite being relatively cheap compared to other banks.
- Kotak Mahindra Bank – This bank is valued highly for its premium valuation owing to good governance standards and conservative risk-taking practices.
- State Bank of India (SBI) – Being the largest public sector bank in India, this bank gives FIIs access to the wider Indian economy, in addition to their improved performance metrics in recent times.
- Bajaj Finance – This non-banking financial company has established itself through its high return on equity ratio and an aggressive yet prudent lending practices into retail and consumer finance segments.
Information Technology
- Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) – The biggest Indian software services export business is highly valued among FIIs due to its excellent ability to generate cash flow, high levels of dividend payments, and consistent long-term customer relations.
- Infosys – The number two player in the IT hierarchy has much to offer foreign investment capital with its exposure to global technology spend and consulting revenues.
Energy & Conglomerates
- Reliance Industries — As India’s most diversified conglomerate, spanning energy, retail, telecom, and digital services, Reliance is often a default large-cap holding for any fund with meaningful India exposure.
Telecom
- Bharti Airtel — Rising average revenue per user (ARPU), a strengthening digital and enterprise business, and improving balance sheet metrics have made Airtel one of the more consistently held telecom names among FIIs, including GQG Partners.
Infrastructure & Industrials
- Larsen & Toubro (L&T) – The capital expenditure cycle and increasing defense manufacturing activities in India make L&T stand for the story of infrastructure development in the nation.
- UltraTech Cement – As India’s largest cement company, UltraTech is affected directly by the trends in infrastructure and housing capex that attract FIIs into L&T.
- Adani Ports & SEZ – India’s largest privately-owned port company, Adani Ports provides foreign investors with access to logistics infrastructure, although the shares of other Adani group companies have attracted less stable institutional interest recently.
Automobiles
- Tata Motors – The revival story at JLR coupled with an active strategy to tap into electric vehicles locally has helped Tata Motors remain in focus for institutions seeking cycle stories.
- Mahindra & Mahindra – With dominance in the SUV category and a robust tractor business, M&M has a growth plus defensive story that catches the fancy of institutions.
- Maruti Suzuki – Being the biggest passenger vehicle manufacturer in the country makes Maruti a pure play for foreign institutions looking for exposure to growing car ownership among the middle class.
Pharmaceuticals
- Sun Pharma — India’s largest pharmaceutical company by market capitalization has built a genuinely global specialty pharma business, reducing its dependence on any single market’s regulatory or pricing risk.
Consumer & FMCG
- Hindustan Unilever — A classic “defensive consumption” holding, HUL offers stability during volatile markets thanks to its portfolio of everyday household and personal care brands.
- Asian Paints — Strong brand equity and industry-leading margins have historically made Asian Paints a favorite quality-consumer pick, though intensifying competition has made this position less uniform among funds recently.
- Titan Company — India’s leading branded jewellery and watches player benefits from the formalization of the gems and jewellery sector, a theme that continues to attract foreign capital.
Where FII Ownership Is Actually Highest Right Now
It should be stated that the stocks that have the largest FII ownership as percentages in 2026 seem to be quite different from the list of large-cap stocks above. According to the latest stock holdings disclosure for the quarter ending March 2026, stocks such as ixigo (Le Travenues Technology), 360 One WAM, Redington, Paytm, and Urban Company seem to be among the stocks that had the largest percentages of FII ownership in the market – several with more than 50%, and ixigo more than 64%. It should be noted that in the list of concentrated ownership, there is not a single PSU bank, commodity producer, or old industry name; almost all of them were relatively new or transformed businesses.
That said, the difference between the two lists is essential to the investor: the first one is the largest FIIs “favorites” as far as rupees invested are concerned, whereas the second one is the most concentrated in percentages of company ownership conviction.
Should You Buy FII Stocks?
- The data on foreign investment institutions’ holdings is published quarterly and represents a snapshot which may be already dated at the moment of publication.
- Unlike individuals, foreign funds have other investment strategies, time frames and risk profiles – a stock that would fit into GQG Partners’ strategy of five years may be unacceptable for a day trader.
- A large foreign investment in a stock may work both ways – if foreign investors decide to sell off, a stock with a high foreign ownership share will fall in price much faster.
- The tendency of foreign outflows for 2026 proves that even the traditionally popular blue chips are vulnerable to institutional outflows.
Final Thoughts
While FII investments still prove a good gauge of institutional conviction in Indian equities, 2026 is an instance where the numbers paint a picture that is a little more complex than “the foreign dollars are in love with these stocks.” In general, large, liquid, well-managed companies within the banks, IT, energy, infrastructure, automobiles, pharmaceuticals, and consumer products industries form the backbone of most FII portfolios. On the other hand, record withdrawals by FIIs and the unprecedented move towards domestic institutional dominance indicate that the attitude of FIIs towards India in general has become more wary than at any point in a decade or so.
The best strategy for the investor is to consider FII shareholdings as one of the criteria along with others such as earnings quality and company valuations.







