Global investors are taking a fresh look at Indian equities this week, driven by a sharp drop in crude oil prices and early signs of renewed foreign fund flows into the market.
NSE and BSE data show the Nifty 50 gained 0.9% over the past week, while the S&P BSE Sensex rose by the same margin. Broader indices were quieter: the Nifty Next 50 added 0.1% and the BSE Midcap and Smallcap indices each edged up just 0.1%.
Crude fall reshapes India's macro picture
The single biggest macro development this week is the collapse in Brent crude prices. From a peak of USD 126.4 per barrel in April 2026, Brent has fallen nearly 42% to around USD 73. That shift matters for India on two fronts. Lower oil prices ease consumer inflation directly and shrink India's import bill, narrowing the current account deficit. Both were significant sources of investor anxiety earlier this year.
The relief is showing up in fund flows. India-focused US-listed ETFs recorded their first net inflows in over a month. Market participants say a sustained recovery in corporate earnings growth to the mid-teens will be the next trigger needed to convert cautious interest into committed foreign investment.
Real estate stocks led weekly gains among large-caps. Lodha Developers jumped 11.6%, Oberoi Realty rose 10.6%, and DLF added 8.8%. Eternal and One97 Communications, the parent of Paytm, also featured in the top five weekly performers with gains of 10.4% and 8.6% respectively.
On the other side, power equipment names sold off sharply. GE Vernova T&D India fell 12.7%, Siemens Energy India dropped 11%, and Hitachi Energy India declined 8.6%. Bank of Baroda shed 9.7% and Avenue Supermarts lost 7%.
IPO activity and a wave of new fund launches
The primary market stayed active. The Knack Packaging IPO was subscribed 87.17 times as of July 3, 2026, signalling strong retail and institutional appetite. The Aastha Spintex IPO was subscribed 5.05 times on July 1.
Fund houses launched a cluster of new offerings this week. JioBlackRock AMC opened its NFO for the Prism Hybrid Long Short Growth Direct Plan. ICICI Prudential AMC launched two NFOs: its Balanced Hybrid Growth Direct Plan and Multi Asset Active FoF Growth Direct Plan. Invesco AMC opened the Summit Equity Long Short Growth Direct Plan. Motilal Oswal AMC launched a passive offering tracking the BSE Midcap 150 Momentum 30 Index. Axis AMC launched a Nifty 50 Equal Weight Index fund, and Trust MF opened its Large & Mid Cap Growth Direct Plan. The volume of launches in a single week reflects fund houses responding to renewed investor interest in diversified and factor-based strategies.
Among mutual funds, realty index funds dominated weekly performance. Tata, Nippon India, and HDFC Nifty Realty Index funds each returned around 8.7 to 8.8% over the week. Silver ETF funds of funds from Angel One and Mirae Asset also featured among the top performers with gains of 7% and 6.5% respectively.
Investor behaviour told its own story. Parag Parikh Flexi Cap and Bandhan Small Cap were the most bought funds, while Quant Multi Cap, JM Flexicap, and SBI Focused were the most sold. Notably, Motilal Oswal Nasdaq 100 FoF also appeared on the most-sold list even as it carries a strong one-year return of 73.5%, suggesting some profit-booking after a strong run.
On the watchlist side, US stocks including SanDisk Corp and Micron Technology drew attention despite steep weekly declines of 16.5% and 13.8% respectively, pointing to bargain-hunting interest from Indian investors in battered semiconductor names.
What to watch next: the trajectory of corporate earnings over the coming quarter will be decisive. If mid-teen earnings growth materialises, it could anchor a more durable foreign inflow cycle into Indian equities. Crude price stability will also be closely tracked, since any reversal toward USD 90 or higher would quickly revive inflation and current account concerns that have weighed on sentiment through much of 2026.