What is FII/DII flow?

FII/DII flow is a widely watched piece of Indian market data. This explainer covers what it measures and where it comes from — as a concept, not as advice.

What does FII/DII flow mean?

FII (Foreign Institutional Investor, also reported as FPI) and DII (Domestic Institutional Investor) flow is the net value of equities these large institutions bought or sold on a given day. It is published market data that gives a sense of how big institutional players moved capital.

Where does FII/DII data come from?

Exchanges and depositories publish daily provisional and final figures for institutional equity and derivative activity. MintX aggregates this published data — typically the last 75 days — and presents it as charts and tables.

Why do people watch institutional flow?

Because institutions trade in large size, their net buying or selling is one factual input many market participants track for context. It describes what already happened; it does not predict future prices and is not a signal to act.

Does MintX advise trades based on FII/DII flow?

No. MintX displays FII/DII flow as factual market data. It does not provide investment advice. MintX is not a SEBI-registered investment adviser.

MintX is a technology and analytics platform, not a SEBI-registered investment adviser or research analyst. This page explains a concept for educational purposes only and is not investment advice. Any example figures use delayed data. Markets carry risk; consult a SEBI-registered adviser before investing.