India Slips to 7th in Global Market Cap Rankings
Source: The Hindu
Summary
India has slipped to the 7th spot in global market-capitalisation rankings in June 2026, with a total market valuation of USD 4.84 trillion, overtaken by South Korea (6th, USD 5.01 trillion). Earlier, in May 2026, India had already lost the 5th rank to Taiwan. The slide is attributed to heavy foreign selling, weak earnings growth, and India’s limited exposure to AI-linked stocks. FPIs have pulled out USD 26.4 billion from Indian equities in 2026, and India’s weight in the MSCI Global Standard Index has fallen from 21% (Sept 2024) to 12.3%.
Key takeaways:
- Rank: India down to 7th (USD 4.84 tn); South Korea moves to 6th (USD 5.01 tn).
- Two-step slide: Taiwan overtook India in May 2026, South Korea in June 2026.
- Reasons: Heavy FPI selling, weak earnings, and a sector-composition mismatch on AI.
- FPI outflow: USD 26.4 billion so far in 2026.
- MSCI weight: Down from 21% → 12.3%.
- AI gap: US/Taiwan/South Korea ride AI hardware; India’s listed tech is IT services, not chip plays.
Background & Concept
What does the ranking measure? Total market capitalisation is the combined dollar value of all listed companies in a country — a rough yardstick of financial-market depth and global investor interest. Rankings shift with stock prices, currency moves, IPOs, delistings, and macro sentiment.
Why India is sliding: Two forces converge. First, foreign money is leaving — higher US bond yields, a strong dollar, high domestic valuations, and geopolitical risk make other markets relatively attractive. Second, a sector-composition mismatch: the global rally is concentrated in AI hardware (US tech giants, Taiwan’s TSMC, South Korea’s Samsung and SK Hynix), while India’s listed tech is dominated by IT services (TCS, Infosys, Wipro) — not direct AI-hardware plays. So even a healthy economy can lose ground in valuation rankings.
Key Facts
| Indicator | Detail |
|---|---|
| India’s rank (June 2026) | 7th |
| India’s market valuation | USD 4.84 trillion |
| Overtaken by | South Korea (6th, USD 5.01 trillion) |
| Earlier (May 2026) | Lost 5th rank to Taiwan |
| FPI outflow in 2026 | USD 26.4 billion |
| MSCI weight (Sept 2024 → latest) | 21% → 12.3% |
| Data source | Bloomberg |
Global Market Cap Ranking (June 2026)
| Rank | Country | Market Cap (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | United States | USD 79.1 trillion |
| 2 | China | USD 16.3 trillion |
| 3 | Japan | USD 8.9 trillion |
| 4 | Hong Kong (SAR of China) | USD 7.6 trillion |
| 5 | Taiwan | USD 5.15 trillion |
| 6 | South Korea | USD 5.01 trillion |
| 7 | India | USD 4.84 trillion |
Main Reasons for the Slide
| Reason | Detail |
|---|---|
| Heavy foreign selling | FPIs withdrew USD 26.4 billion from Indian stocks in 2026 |
| Weak earnings growth | Subdued corporate earnings in Indian-listed companies |
| Limited AI exposure | Capital is concentrating in AI-linked stocks, where India is light |
Why FPIs Are Pulling Out of India
| Factor | Effect |
|---|---|
| US 10-year yield above 4.5% | Makes US assets more attractive |
| Strong dollar | Raises currency risk for Indian investments |
| Slower earnings growth | Below expectations |
| High valuations | After a multi-year rally |
| Geopolitical risk | West Asia war, trade tensions |
| Better-priced EM peers | Including South Korea and Taiwan |
Keywords & Definitions
▸ Market Capitalisation: Total dollar value of a company’s (or country’s) listed shares; share price × number of shares, summed across listings.
▸ FPI (Foreign Portfolio Investor): A foreign investor holding financial assets like equities and bonds without controlling stakes.
▸ MSCI Global Standard Index: A widely tracked global equity index; country weights guide large passive/active fund allocations.
▸ AI-linked stocks: Companies tied to artificial-intelligence hardware/software demand (chipmakers, cloud, AI platforms).
▸ IT services: Software/consulting firms (e.g., TCS, Infosys, Wipro) — distinct from AI-hardware makers.
▸ TSMC: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company — the world’s leading contract chip foundry.
▸ US 10-year Treasury yield: Benchmark US government bond yield; higher yields draw capital toward US assets.
▸ Sector-composition mismatch: When a market’s listed mix underweights the sectors currently driving global valuations.
Question Section (MCQs)
Q1. As of June 2026, India’s rank in global market-cap rankings and its valuation were: (a) 5th; USD 5.15 trillion (b) 6th; USD 5.01 trillion (c) 7th; USD 4.84 trillion (d) 8th; USD 4.50 trillion
Q2. Match the country with its global market-cap rank in June 2026: A. Taiwan — 1. 4th B. Hong Kong — 2. 6th C. South Korea — 3. 5th D. India — 4. 7th (a) A-3, B-1, C-2, D-4 (b) A-1, B-3, C-2, D-4 (c) A-3, B-2, C-1, D-4 (d) A-4, B-1, C-2, D-3
Q3. Consider the following reasons cited for India’s slide:
- Heavy foreign portfolio selling.
- Weak earnings growth in Indian-listed companies.
- Limited exposure to AI-linked stocks. Which are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Q4. Foreign portfolio investors withdrew approximately how much from Indian stocks in 2026 (so far)? (a) USD 7 billion (b) USD 12.3 billion (c) USD 26.4 billion (d) USD 40 billion
Q5. India’s weight in the MSCI Global Standard Index changed from September 2024 to the latest reading as: (a) 12.3% to 21% (b) 21% to 12.3% (c) 18% to 12.3% (d) 21% to 18%
Q6. Match the AI-driver company with its market: A. TSMC — 1. United States B. SK Hynix — 2. Taiwan C. Nvidia — 3. South Korea (a) A-2, B-3, C-1 (b) A-1, B-3, C-2 (c) A-2, B-1, C-3 (d) A-3, B-2, C-1
Q7. Which of the following are cited as reasons for FPIs pulling out of India?
- US 10-year yield above 4.5%.
- A strong US dollar raising currency risk.
- High valuations after a multi-year rally. (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Q8. The “sector-composition mismatch” that hurt India’s valuation refers to: (a) Over-reliance on banking stocks (b) India’s listed tech being IT services rather than AI-hardware plays (c) Excessive weight of public-sector firms (d) Lack of any technology companies
Q9. Which country overtook India in May 2026, before South Korea did so in June 2026? (a) Japan (b) Hong Kong (c) Taiwan (d) China
Q10. Consider the following statements about global market capitalisation as an indicator:
- It reflects the total dollar value of all listed companies in a country.
- Rankings can shift due to currency moves and IPOs.
- A falling market cap can signal foreign investor pullback. Which are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer Key with Explanations
▸ Q1 → (c) 7th; USD 4.84 trillion. India slipped to 7th in June 2026 at USD 4.84 trillion, behind South Korea.
▸ Q2 → (a) A-3, B-1, C-2, D-4. Taiwan 5th, Hong Kong 4th, South Korea 6th, India 7th.
▸ Q3 → (d) 1, 2 and 3. All three — foreign selling, weak earnings, and limited AI exposure — were cited.
▸ Q4 → (c) USD 26.4 billion. FPIs pulled out about USD 26.4 billion from Indian stocks in 2026.
▸ Q5 → (b) 21% to 12.3%. India’s MSCI weight fell from ~21% (Sept 2024) to 12.3%.
▸ Q6 → (a) A-2, B-3, C-1. TSMC — Taiwan; SK Hynix — South Korea; Nvidia — United States.
▸ Q7 → (d) 1, 2 and 3. Higher US yields, a strong dollar, and stretched valuations were all cited (along with slower earnings, geopolitics, and better EM peers).
▸ Q8 → (b) India’s listed tech is dominated by IT services (TCS, Infosys, Wipro), not direct AI-hardware plays — costing it in AI-driven valuations.
▸ Q9 → (c) Taiwan. Taiwan pushed India down in May 2026; South Korea did so in June 2026.
▸ Q10 → (d) 1, 2 and 3. Market cap reflects total listed value, shifts with currency/IPOs, and a fall can signal foreign pullback.