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Home»Equity Investments»RBI widens direct equity access for overseas investors, doubles investment limits under PIS
Equity Investments

RBI widens direct equity access for overseas investors, doubles investment limits under PIS

By CharlotteJune 9, 20264 Mins Read
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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), on 5 June, widened the direct equity market access for overseas individual investors. It raised the investment limits for non-resident Indians (NRIs) and overseas citizens of India (OCIs), and extended the same facility to all Persons Resident Outside India (PROIs), converting the Budget 2026 announcement into regulatory reality in four months.
RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra, announcing the decision at the Monetary Policy Committee meeting, said that the limits for NRI and OCI investments in listed equity instruments without Securities and Exchange Board of India’s (Sebi) registration, are being increased, and that the same facility is now being extended to all individual PROIs, at par with NRIs and OCIs.

The move operationalises a proposal first made in the Union Budget on 1 February 2026. Under the Portfolio Investment Scheme (PIS), the individual cap for a PROI has been doubled from 5% to 10% of a company’s paid-up capital, while the aggregate ceiling for all PROIs has been raised from 10% to 24%.

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“This is the February 2026 Budget being executed, and executed quickly,” said Animesh Hardia, Senior Vice President, Quantitative Research at 1 Finance. “The RBI has moved it from intent to operation in four months, which, by the standards of Indian financial reform, is rapid, and the speed is itself the message.”

Hardia situated the measure in the broader context of foreign capital flows. “The measure arrived as one of five steps in the same statement aimed at attracting foreign capital, and it sits next to the other number the RBI Governor shared—foreign portfolio investors have pulled out $13.7 billion since April, almost all of it from equities. Institutional money moves in cycles, and right now, it is moving out. So India is widening the door for a different kind of investor, the NRI who buys shares in companies they grew up watching and holds them. That capital behaves more like household savings than trading positions,” he says.