Behind India's Rs 5.5 lakh crore FII selloff lies a hidden list of 84 multibagger winners
Foreign institutional investors have sold Indian stocks worth Rs 5.5 lakh crore. However, a hidden list reveals 84 stocks where FIIs have actually increased their holdings. These companies have delivered multibagger returns over two years. Experts...

Midwest Energy tops the list with a 19,859% two-year return, alongside an FII stake that went from zero in September 2024 to over 12% by March 2026. Sumeet Industries delivered a 6,376% return, while CIAN Agro and Colab Platforms returned over 3,000% and 2,200% respectively — all stocks where foreign investors built positions from scratch, shows data from ACE Equity.
Among the more widely-tracked names, GE Vernova T&D India saw FII holding surge from 6.82% to 20.39%, a jump of over 13.57 percentage points, while delivering a 216% two-year return. Hitachi Energy India saw a similar pattern, with FII stakes rising from 5.10% to 11.68% alongside a 217% return. TD Power Systems' FII holding nearly doubled, from 16.24% to 26.69%, on the back of a 220% return. MTAR Technologies saw FII stakes more than double from 7.81% to 17.31%, returning 254% over two years.
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Sterlite Tech, a name closely watched by retail investors, saw FII holding rise from 8.36% to 11.47% with a 339% two-year return. Apollo Micro Systems recorded one of the sharpest stake increases from 0.19% to 3.64% alongside a 270% return. Sky Gold's FII holding rose from 0.25% to 1.20%, delivering a 304% return. Wockhardt's FII stake edged up from 6.69% to 7.08% with a 225% return, while Aeroflex Industries saw holdings climb from 0.13% to 1.49% alongside a 185% return. Paras Defence And Space Technologies, riding the defence theme, saw FII stakes rise from 3.46% to 5.06% with a 121% return.
Smallcaps, midcaps new FII favourites in India?
The pattern raises an uncomfortable question for the bears: if FIIs are selling India broadly, why are they simultaneously building positions in dozens of mid- and small-cap names that have multiplied investor wealth?Bhan added that markets are likely to move ahead of FII flows, not the other way around. "My personal view is that markets will rise before FIIs come back. They need a trigger too — earnings visibility," he said, noting that this visibility remains low currently due to elevated oil costs. His advice for the year ahead: "use this year to accumulate... in the third, fourth, and fifth year you make bigger money." He noted valuations have already de-rated "from 20–22x P/E to 18x" and are unlikely to fall much further, with the only real overhang being a sentiment shift "from extreme euphoria to extreme pessimism."
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What should investors do?
BofA Securities India MD and Head of Research Amish Shah offered a sector-wise roadmap built around three buckets. On valuations, he said large private banks and PSU banks stand out as "beaten down beyond what's justified," while flagging caution on mid-sized private banks exposed to commercial vehicles, microfinance and MSMEs, which he called "pockets of stress near term."On growth, Shah's team favours consumer discretionary themes — jewelry, travel and tourism, and quick commerce — along with data-centre-linked plays in cables, wires, transformers and gensets, plus non-ferrous metals like aluminium and copper riding the global AI capex cycle. His third bucket centres on policy bets, especially energy security, the biofuels ecosystem, electrification-linked power companies, and shipbuilding — a sector he believes India is positioned to capture as China, Korea and Japan, which together "hold 92% of global market share," face an ageing workforce problem.
Morgan Stanley is overweight financials, consumer discretionary and industrials, underweight energy, materials, utilities and healthcare, and flagged IT services as a potential "dark horse as the world pivots to these companies to build AI applications and solutions."
(Data: Ritesh Presswala)
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of Economic Times)
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