This page shows daily FII (Foreign Institutional Investors) and DII (Domestic Institutional Investors) cash market activity in Indian equities on NSE and BSE. It includes gross buy and sell figures, net flows in crores, F&O derivatives open interest positioning, buying and selling streaks, flow heatmaps, and aggregated weekly, monthly, and yearly institutional trends. Data is sourced from SEBI and NSE, updated daily after market hours.

FII & DII Data

Institutional cash flows & F&O derivatives positioning — NSE & BSE

Strong Inflow Last updated 30 Mar 2026
Latest Session
Monday, 30 March 2026
FII / FPI Net
-₹11,163 Cr
DII Net
+₹14,895 Cr
FII Aggression: 43% DII Support: 57%
Combined Liquidity +₹3,732 Cr
Current FII Streak
21 Days Selling
Streak Velocity
-₹35,760 Cr
Current DII Streak
23 Days Buying
Streak Velocity
+₹41,792 Cr
30-Day Net Flows
FII 30D
-₹1,35,203 Cr
DII 30D
+₹1,77,161 Cr
Cumulative Net Flows

Sector-wise FPI Net Flow

24 sectors · Data as of 15 Mar 2026

Financial Services
28.9% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 32,704 Cr
1Y net flow
₹21,170 Cr
Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels
7.1% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 2,932 Cr
1Y net flow
₹15,701 Cr
Automobile and Auto Components
6.7% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 4,940 Cr
1Y net flow
₹7,035 Cr
Healthcare
6.3% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 2,356 Cr
1Y net flow
₹26,839 Cr
Capital Goods
6% of AUM
Last fortnight
▲ 3,897 Cr
1Y net flow
₹25,687 Cr
Information Technology
5.4% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 1,263 Cr
1Y net flow
₹88,804 Cr
Telecommunication
5% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 3,853 Cr
1Y net flow
₹29,568 Cr
Sovereign
4.8% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 6,134 Cr
1Y net flow
₹41,485 Cr
Others
4.3% of AUM
Last fortnight
▲ 98 Cr
1Y net flow
₹52,228 Cr
Fast Moving Consumer Goods
4.3% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 2,403 Cr
1Y net flow
₹36,330 Cr
Metals & Mining
3.6% of AUM
Last fortnight
▲ 876 Cr
1Y net flow
₹25,068 Cr
Power
3.5% of AUM
Last fortnight
▲ 588 Cr
1Y net flow
₹17,519 Cr
Consumer Services
3.1% of AUM
Last fortnight
▲ 531 Cr
1Y net flow
₹14,675 Cr
Consumer Durables
2.2% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 1,727 Cr
1Y net flow
₹18,812 Cr
Services
2.1% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 1,273 Cr
1Y net flow
₹6,056 Cr
Realty
1.8% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 2,618 Cr
1Y net flow
₹15,026 Cr
Chemicals
1.6% of AUM
Last fortnight
▲ 225 Cr
1Y net flow
₹5,754 Cr
Construction
1.6% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 2,975 Cr
1Y net flow
₹68 Cr
Construction Materials
1.4% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 1,492 Cr
1Y net flow
₹5,761 Cr
Textiles
0.2% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 177 Cr
1Y net flow
₹2,440 Cr
Media, Entertainment & Publication
0.1% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 57 Cr
1Y net flow
₹64 Cr
Diversified
0.1% of AUM
Last fortnight
▲ 440 Cr
1Y net flow
₹1,065 Cr
Forest Materials
0% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 4 Cr
1Y net flow
₹10 Cr
Utilities
0% of AUM
Last fortnight
▼ 14 Cr
1Y net flow
₹169 Cr
FII Flow Activity
MarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecJanFebMar
MON
WED
FRI
Selling Buying
1Y FII: -₹3,32,687 Cr
DII Flow Activity
MarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecJanFebMar
MON
WED
FRI
Selling Buying
1Y DII: +₹8,49,758 Cr
Derivatives Positioning (F&O)
Participant-wise Open Interest · 30 Mar 2026
Foreign Institutional Investors (FII)
Index Futures
57.3K 3.2L
Stock Futures
40.8L 31.0L
Index Calls
2.7L 5.0L
Index Puts
6.3L 2.6L
Domestic Institutional Investors (DII)
Index Futures
87.9K 14.1K
Stock Futures
3.0L 41.4L
Note: DIIs generally do not write options; primary exposure is via Index Futures hedging.
DateFIIDIITotal
30 Mar-11,163+14,895+3,732
27 Mar-4,367+3,566-801
25 Mar-1,805+5,430+3,624
24 Mar-8,010+5,867-2,142
23 Mar-10,414+12,034+1,620
20 Mar-5,518+5,706+188
19 Mar-7,558+3,864-3,694
18 Mar-2,714+3,253+539
17 Mar-4,741+5,225+484
16 Mar-9,366+12,593+3,228
13 Mar-10,717+9,977-739
12 Mar-7,050+7,450+400
11 Mar-6,267+4,966-1,302
10 Mar-4,673+6,333+1,661
09 Mar-6,346+9,014+2,668
06 Mar-6,030+6,972+941
05 Mar-3,753+5,153+1,401
04 Mar-8,753+12,068+3,316
02 Mar-3,296+8,594+5,298
27 Feb-7,536+12,293+4,756
26 Feb-3,466+5,032+1,566
25 Feb+2,992+5,119+8,110
24 Feb-103+3,161+3,059
23 Feb+3,484-1,292+2,191
20 Feb-935+2,637+1,703
19 Feb-880-596-1,477
18 Feb+1,154+440+1,595
17 Feb+995+187+1,182
16 Feb-972+1,667+695
13 Feb-7,395+5,554-1,841

Understanding FII & DII Data in Indian Markets

Foreign Institutional Investors (FII) and Domestic Institutional Investors (DII) are the two largest categories of institutional participants in the Indian stock market. FIIs — also referred to as FPIs (Foreign Portfolio Investors) by SEBI — include global mutual funds, hedge funds, sovereign wealth funds, and pension funds that invest in Indian equities. DIIs include Indian mutual funds (AMCs), insurance companies like LIC and HDFC Life, banks, and other domestic financial institutions.

Every trading day, NSE and BSE publish provisional FII and DII activity data showing gross purchases, gross sales, and net investment in the cash (equity) segment. This data is widely tracked by traders and investors because institutional flows often drive short-term market direction. When FIIs sell heavily, Indian indices like Nifty 50 and Sensex tend to fall; when DIIs step in with strong buying, they can cushion the decline.

On Tapetide, we aggregate this data into daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly views, compute buying/selling streaks, generate flow heatmaps for visual pattern recognition, and display F&O (Futures & Options) derivatives positioning data showing how FIIs and DIIs are positioned across index futures, stock futures, and options. All data is updated daily after market hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is FII and DII data in the Indian stock market?
FII (Foreign Institutional Investors) and DII (Domestic Institutional Investors) data tracks the daily buying and selling activity of large institutional investors in Indian equities on NSE and BSE. FIIs include foreign mutual funds, hedge funds, and pension funds, while DIIs include Indian mutual funds, insurance companies like LIC, and banks. This data is published daily by SEBI and stock exchanges after market hours.
How does FII DII activity affect stock market direction?
FII and DII flows are a key indicator of market sentiment. When FIIs are net buyers, it typically signals foreign confidence in Indian markets and can push indices higher. When FIIs sell heavily, markets often decline. DIIs frequently act as a counterbalance — absorbing selling pressure from FIIs using domestic mutual fund SIP inflows. The combined net flow (FII + DII) gives the clearest picture of institutional liquidity entering or leaving the market.
What is the difference between FII cash market and F&O derivatives data?
Cash market data shows actual buying and selling of stocks by FIIs and DIIs, measured in crores (₹). F&O (Futures & Options) derivatives data shows open interest positions — how many contracts institutions hold in index futures, stock futures, index options (calls and puts). Cash data reflects direct equity investment, while F&O data reveals hedging strategies and directional bets. Both together give a complete picture of institutional positioning.
What does FII streak mean and why does it matter?
FII streak refers to the number of consecutive trading days where FIIs have been net buyers or net sellers. A long selling streak (e.g., 10+ days) often indicates sustained foreign outflows due to global factors like rising US bond yields, dollar strength, or geopolitical risks. A long buying streak signals renewed foreign interest. Streak data helps investors gauge the persistence and conviction behind institutional flows.
How often is FII DII data updated on Tapetide?
FII and DII data on Tapetide is updated daily after market hours, typically by 7-8 PM IST on trading days. The data includes cash market flows (gross buy, gross sell, net), F&O derivatives positioning, and computed metrics like streaks, weekly/monthly/yearly aggregations, and flow heatmaps. Data is sourced from NSE and SEBI provisional figures.
What is the FII DII flow heatmap and how do I read it?
The flow heatmap is a GitHub-style activity grid showing daily FII or DII net flows over the past year. Each cell represents one trading day. Green cells indicate net buying (darker = heavier buying), red cells indicate net selling (darker = heavier selling), and grey cells indicate neutral or no-trading days. The heatmap helps you quickly spot patterns — sustained selling phases, seasonal trends, and periods of heavy accumulation.
Where can I see historical FII DII data — weekly, monthly, and yearly?
Tapetide provides FII DII data aggregated at daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly levels. The daily view shows individual trading sessions with gross buy/sell and net figures. Weekly and monthly views aggregate net flows to reveal medium-term trends. The yearly view shows calendar-year totals with a domestic multiplier metric that compares DII absorption against FII selling.
What is the domestic multiplier in yearly FII DII data?
The domestic multiplier shows how much DII buying offset FII selling in a given calendar year. For example, a multiplier of 1.5x means DIIs bought 1.5 times the amount FIIs sold. This metric is only calculated when FIIs are net sellers and DIIs are net buyers. A multiplier above 1.0x indicates domestic institutions fully absorbed foreign selling pressure, which is generally seen as a sign of market resilience.
How to read FII and DII data?
FII and DII data is read using net buy or sell values for each trading day. If the net value is positive (buying exceeds selling), it indicates bullish institutional sentiment. A negative net value means more selling than buying, signalling bearish sentiment. Beyond single-day figures, analysing cumulative FII and DII activity over weeks or months helps you understand whether market movements are backed by sustained institutional conviction or are short-lived reactions.
Where can I find reliable FII and DII data?
Official FII and DII data is published daily by NSE and BSE after market hours. SEBI also publishes FPI (Foreign Portfolio Investor) data. Tapetide aggregates data from these official sources and presents it with additional analytics — streaks, heatmaps, weekly/monthly/yearly aggregations, and F&O derivatives positioning — making it easier to spot trends without manually downloading exchange reports.
How to check registered FII and DII companies in India?
Registered FII (now called FPI — Foreign Portfolio Investor) entities can be found on the SEBI website under the "Intermediaries/Market Infrastructure Institutions" section by clicking "FPIs/Deemed FPIs". For DIIs, you can check registered mutual funds and portfolio managers under the same section. SEBI maintains an exhaustive, searchable list of all registered institutional investors operating in Indian markets.
How is FII and DII activity predicted?
Predicting FII and DII movements involves analysing historical trading patterns, monitoring global economic trends (US Fed policy, dollar index, crude oil prices), tracking interest rate and currency fluctuations, and staying updated on domestic policy developments like budget announcements or RBI rate decisions. Seasonal patterns — such as FII selling during US tax season or DII buying during SIP inflow months — also provide predictive signals. No single factor is definitive, but combining these inputs helps gauge likely institutional behaviour.
Do FIIs and DIIs use cover orders and bracket orders?
No, FIIs and DIIs generally do not use cover orders or bracket orders. These order types are designed for retail intraday traders who need automated stop-loss and target management. Institutional investors operate with much larger position sizes and use algorithmic execution strategies, block deals, and negotiated trades instead. Their orders are typically executed through dedicated institutional trading desks with customised risk management systems.