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FII and DII Provisional Cash-Market Flows: FIIs Net Sell Rs 2,124.98 Crore for Second Consecutive Session While DIIs Absorb With Rs 3,123.95 Crore Net Buying

  • June 11, 2026
  • Posted by: Ankit Jaiswal
  • Category: News
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FII and DII Provisional Cash-Market Flows: FIIs Net Sell Rs 2,124.98 Crore

FII and DII data (June 10, 2026, NSE provisional): FII net outflow Rs 2,124.98 Cr (Buy Rs 14,047.79 Cr vs Sell Rs 16,172.77 Cr). DII net inflow Rs 3,123.95 Cr (Buy Rs 17,396.40 Cr vs Sell Rs 14,272.45 Cr). June 9 FII outflow: Rs 4,566.03 Cr; DII inflow: Rs 6,159.48 Cr. 2-session: FII net -Rs 6,690 Cr; DII net +Rs 9,283 Cr. DII more than offsets FII selling.

The provisional FII and DII cash-market flow data for the June 10, 2026 trading session shows foreign institutional investors (FII/FPI) continuing to sell Indian equities for the second consecutive session, recording a net outflow of Rs 2,124.98 crore. Domestic institutional investors (DII), anchored by strong SIP inflows into mutual funds and systematic buying from LIC and pension funds, countered with a net inflow of Rs 3,123.95 crore, more than absorbing the foreign selling. The FII and DII divergence continues a pattern seen across June 9-10, 2026, where cumulative FII selling of Rs 6,690.01 crore has been met with Rs 9,283.43 crore of DII buying, providing a meaningful support floor for Indian equity markets even as the Nifty 50 declined on geopolitical headwinds from US-Iran tensions and a surge in crude oil prices.

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Table of Contents

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  • FII and DII: June 10 Provisional Cash-Market Data
  • FII and DII: Two-Session History (June 9-10)
  • Why Are FIIs Selling? Key Triggers
  • Why Are DIIs Buying? The Structural Story
  • FII and DII Net Flow Trend: What the Numbers Mean for Markets
  • Sector and Stock Level Impact of FII and DII Flows
  • Conclusion: DII Absorbs FII Selling for Second Day Running
  • Frequently Asked Questions
    • What is the FII and DII data for today?
    • Why are FIIs selling Indian equities?
    • Why are DIIs buying when FIIs are selling?
    • What happens to the market when FII sells and DII buys?
    • How do I track FII and DII data daily?
    • What is the difference between FII and DII in the stock market?

FII and DII: June 10 Provisional Cash-Market Data

Investor Type Gross Buy (Rs Cr) Gross Sell (Rs Cr) Net Flow (Rs Cr) Direction
FII / FPI (Foreign Institutional Investors) 14,047.79 16,172.77 -2,124.98 Net Outflow (Selling)
DII (Domestic Institutional Investors) 17,396.40 14,272.45 +3,123.95 Net Inflow (Buying)
Combined Market Impact 31,444.19 30,445.22 +998.97 DII more than offset FII selling

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FII and DII: Two-Session History (June 9-10)

Session FII Buy FII Sell FII Net DII Buy DII Sell DII Net
10 Jun 2026 Rs 14,047.79 Cr Rs 16,172.77 Cr -Rs 2,124.98 Cr Rs 17,396.40 Cr Rs 14,272.45 Cr +Rs 3,123.95 Cr
09 Jun 2026 Rs 14,735.47 Cr Rs 19,301.50 Cr -Rs 4,566.03 Cr Rs 17,664.98 Cr Rs 11,505.50 Cr +Rs 6,159.48 Cr
2-Session Total Rs 28,783.26 Cr Rs 35,474.27 Cr -Rs 6,690.01 Cr Rs 35,061.38 Cr Rs 25,777.95 Cr +Rs 9,283.43 Cr

Why Are FIIs Selling? Key Triggers

The FII and DII divergence in the last two sessions is rooted in a global risk-off wave driven by US-Iran geopolitical tensions. Brent crude has surged to $91-93 per barrel, raising inflation concerns across emerging markets including India, which imports 80%+ of its crude oil. For foreign portfolio investors, a rising crude price combined with a stronger US dollar reduces the appeal of Indian equities relative to safer dollar-denominated assets. Additionally, the US CPI data release on June 11 is creating pre-event caution among FIIs who prefer to reduce emerging market exposure ahead of potential Federal Reserve policy signals. On June 9, the FII and DII gap was widest at Rs 10,725 crore (FII -Rs 4,566 crore vs DII +Rs 6,159 crore), narrowing on June 10 to Rs 5,249 crore, suggesting the intensity of FII selling is diminishing.

Why Are DIIs Buying? The Structural Story

DII buying in the FII and DII equation is structurally anchored by India’s booming domestic savings flowing into equity mutual funds. May 2026 SIP inflows were approximately Rs 30,953 crore, representing the third-highest monthly SIP collection ever. This steady flow of domestic retail investor money gives fund managers a continuous mandate to deploy into equities regardless of FII behaviour. On days when FIIs sell and prices dip, DII fund managers have an incentive to accelerate purchases to improve their average cost. LIC (Life Insurance Corporation of India), with over Rs 50 lakh crore in assets under management, is also a systematic equity buyer through insurance premium reinvestment. The combined institutional flow picture over two sessions: DIIs have net bought Rs 9,283.43 crore vs FIIs’ net sale of Rs 6,690.01 crore.

FII and DII Net Flow Trend: What the Numbers Mean for Markets

In the short run, FII and DII net flow dynamics suggest limited downside for Indian equities despite foreign selling. The net combined institutional position over the June 9-10 two-session window is a net buyer of Rs 2,593 crore (DII +Rs 9,283 crore minus FII -Rs 6,690 crore), which is inherently market-supportive. However, sustained FII selling over 5-10 sessions without reversal can overcome DII buying capacity and trigger sharper index corrections. The key variable to watch is the pace of FII selling: the moderation from Rs 4,566 crore (June 9) to Rs 2,125 crore (June 10) in FII and DII net outflow is a constructive signal suggesting foreign investors are not in panic mode but are selectively reducing positions in vulnerable sectors (IT, PSU banks, crude-sensitive stocks) while quality private banks and FMCG are attracting institutional buying.

Sector and Stock Level Impact of FII and DII Flows

Based on the institutional flow pattern over the last two sessions, the sector-level impact is playing out as follows. IT stocks (Infosys, TCS, HCL Tech) are seeing FII selling as AI disruption concerns combine with global risk-off to reduce exposure to India’s largest export sector. PSU banks (Bank of Baroda, Union Bank, PNB) are also seeing selling from both FII and DII on NIM compression concerns and crude oil sensitivity. Conversely, FMCG stocks (HUL, Nestle, Britannia) are attracting DII buying as defensive sector rotation accelerates. Quality private banks (ICICI Bank: +1.92% today; Axis Bank: +0.62%) are also seeing DII accumulation, consistent with the divergence where domestic funds are rotating toward high-quality franchises at corrected valuations.

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Conclusion: DII Absorbs FII Selling for Second Day Running

The FII and DII provisional cash-market data for June 10, 2026 confirms the structural resilience of Indian equity markets during periods of foreign selling. FIIs net sold Rs 2,124.98 crore (down from Rs 4,566.03 crore on June 9), while DIIs net bought Rs 3,123.95 crore (domestic institutions providing the demand floor). Over the two-session window of June 9-10, the FII and DII combined net position is a market buyer of Rs 2,593.42 crore. Track daily FII and DII flow data, sector rotation analysis, and stock-specific institutional activity on Univest. Consult a SEBI-registered advisor before investing.

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Disclaimer: FII/DII data sourced from NSE provisional cash-market figures. This content is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice by Univest (SEBI RA INH000013776). Investments are subject to market risk. Consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor before investing.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the FII and DII data for today?

Ans. The FII and DII provisional cash-market data for the June 10, 2026 session shows FII/FPI net selling of Rs 2,124.98 crore (gross buy Rs 14,047.79 crore vs gross sell Rs 16,172.77 crore) and DII net buying of Rs 3,123.95 crore (gross buy Rs 17,396.40 crore vs gross sell Rs 14,272.45 crore). This is the second consecutive session of FII selling, though the quantum has improved from Rs 4,566.03 crore net outflow on June 9. DII buying is also moderating from Rs 6,159.48 crore on June 9 to Rs 3,123.95 crore today.

Why are FIIs selling Indian equities?

Ans. FIIs are selling Indian equities for three primary reasons in the June 9-10, 2026 sessions. First, US-Iran geopolitical tensions are driving global risk-off sentiment, pushing FIIs toward safer assets like US Treasuries and gold rather than emerging market equities like India. Second, Brent crude oil surging near $91-93 per barrel raises inflation concerns for India specifically, as India is a major crude importer, which reduces its relative attractiveness. Third, a strengthening US dollar (DXY rising on safe-haven demand) makes dollar-denominated US assets more attractive vs rupee-denominated Indian equities for foreign investors.

Why are DIIs buying when FIIs are selling?

Ans. DIIs (domestic mutual funds, insurance companies, pension funds, and banks) are buying when FIIs sell because of three structural reasons. First, domestic mutual funds have significant inflows from Indian retail investors through SIPs (Rs 30,953 crore in May 2026) that must be deployed into equities. Second, DII fund managers see the FII-driven dip as a buying opportunity at lower valuations, particularly in quality large-cap banking, FMCG, and IT stocks. Third, LIC, EPFO, and other pension funds have a mandate to invest in Indian equities and buy systematically regardless of foreign investor sentiment, providing a consistent demand floor.

What happens to the market when FII sells and DII buys?

Ans. When FII and DII flows diverge, the market typically sees limited net downside because DII buying offsets FII selling. In the June 9-10, 2026 two-session window, FIIs sold a net Rs 6,690.01 crore while DIIs bought a net Rs 9,283.43 crore, meaning DII buying more than offset FII selling by Rs 2,593.42 crore. In such a scenario, the Nifty 50 and Sensex may decline intraday as FII selling creates selling pressure, but the DII buying provides support and limits the downside. The Nifty 50 is currently near 23,100, down approximately 1.2% on June 11, partially held up by DII absorption of FII outflows.

How do I track FII and DII data daily?

Ans. FII and DII provisional cash-market flow data is published by the National Stock Exchange (NSE) on its website at the end of each trading session. NSE publishes gross buy, gross sell, and net figures for both FII/FPI and DII categories. SEBI also publishes monthly FII and DII data on its website. For daily tracking with sector-level breakdown and stock-impact analysis, platforms like Univest provide curated FII and DII flow data integrated with equity research, helping investors understand which stocks are seeing institutional accumulation or distribution.

What is the difference between FII and DII in the stock market?

Ans. FII (Foreign Institutional Investors) or FPI (Foreign Portfolio Investors) are overseas funds such as hedge funds, sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, and asset managers from outside India who invest in Indian equities. DII (Domestic Institutional Investors) are India-based institutions such as mutual funds, life insurance companies (like LIC), general insurance companies, pension funds (like EPFO, NPS), and banks. FII and DII flows are the two most tracked institutional investor categories in India because their combined daily trading accounts for 40-60% of NSE cash market turnover, and their net buying or selling has a direct short-term impact on the Nifty 50 and Sensex direction.



FII and DII Provisional Cash-Market Flow
Author: Ankit Jaiswal
Ankit Jaiswal is the Senior Research Analyst at Univest, leading the platform's in-house equity research desk and serving as the editorial reviewer for all research and blog content published at univest.in. With 11+ years of experience in Indian equity markets, he oversees stock recommendations, earnings analysis, sector coverage, and ensures every published article meets SEBI Research Analyst Regulations. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce (B.Com) from St. Xavier's College, Kolkata — one of India's most prestigious commerce institutions — and has cleared CMT Level 2 from the CMT Association, a globally recognised certification in technical analysis and market research. His research methodology combines fundamental analysis (earnings quality, balance sheet strength, management commentary) with advanced technical analysis (chart patterns, momentum indicators, market structure) — giving Univest's retail investors a dual-lens approach that most Indian research platforms lack. Ankit is among the most comprehensively certified analysts in Indian financial media, holding five NISM certifications: Series-XV (Research Analyst), Series-VIII (Equity Derivatives), Series-VII (SORM), Series-VI (Depository Operations), and Series-V-A (Mutual Fund Distributors). At Univest — India's SEBI-registered research and advisory platform — Ankit's responsibilities include leading the research team, finalising stock recommendations published across Pro Lite, Pro Super, and Pro Gold advisory services, and maintaining editorial oversight of all YMYL financial content published on the blog.

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