For three years, India was the emerging market every fund manager wanted to own. Now the money is moving the other way.
Foreign investors are pulling out and Indian stocks look pricey. Meanwhile, China - the market India was supposed to replace - is suddenly the trade everyone is talking about again.
How India Became The Trade
India's rise wasn't an accident. As fund managers soured on China, they needed somewhere else to put their emerging market money.
India checked every box: a young workforce, a growing middle class, and a government pushing through business-friendly reforms. The Nifty 50 - India's main stock index - rode that story to roughly triple its March 2020 lows.
By early 2024, India was the second-largest weighting in the MSCI Emerging Markets index - the benchmark global funds use to track stocks in developing countries. Only China ranked bigger, with India climbing to around 18% versus China's 27%.
Global funds piled in.
We unpack the emerging market moves Wall Street is actually watching in Market Briefs - five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.
Why The Tide Is Turning
Two things changed.
First, the math got hard. Indian stocks trade at roughly 21 times forward earnings - meaning investors pay $21 today for every dollar of profit expected next year.
That's well above the emerging market average of around 13. At those prices, buyers need profits to keep growing fast.
They aren't. Corporate earnings growth has slowed, and consumer spending in India has come in softer than expected.
Second, China came back into play. Beijing's stimulus and cheap stock prices are pulling foreign cash back, and money that left China for India is starting to reverse course.
The result: foreign investors sold roughly $24 billion in Indian stocks in 2026 so far, surpassing 2025's record annual outflows - one of the biggest exoduses on record.
What To Watch
The India story isn't broken - the long-term case of growth, demographics, and reform is still intact.
But "long term" and "buy at any price" are not the same thing.
The next earnings season will tell investors whether the slowdown is a blip or a trend. If profits keep missing, the premium investors pay for Indian stocks gets harder to justify.
Three years of easy gains made India look like a one-way trade. It never was.
If you want this kind of read on global markets every morning, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs - you also get a 45-minute investing course as a bonus.
