Investors Piling Into India Markets, Stock ETFs | ETF Trends

Foreign investment dollars are declining across the emerging markets. However, India is still attracting investors, which could help support the long-term outlook for related country-specific exchange traded funds.

There were 1,508 greenfield inward investment projects announced or launched in emerging countries over the first quarter, with an estimated $108 billion in capital expenditures, compared to 2,030 projects and $134 billion over the same period last year, reports Courtney Fingar for the Financial Times.

Meanwhile, India is maintaining its FDI momentum, attracting 177 new projects, the same as in the first quarter of 2014, and capital expenditure of $21 billion, or almost three times the $7.7 billion record for the same period last year.

Greenfield investments are a type of foreign direct investment where a parent company starts a new offshoot in a foreign country by developing new operational facilities.

The popularity of India as an emerging market investment locale is also reflected in the ETF universe. Year-to-date, the WisdomTree India Earnings Fund (NYSEArca: EPI) attracted $459.2 million in new net inflows, iShares India 50 ETF (NasdaqGM: INDY) added $208.0 million in net assets and PowerShares India Portfolio (NYSEArca: PIN) saw $75.8 million in inflows, according to ETF.com. In contrast, the broader iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (NYSEArca: EEM) experienced almost $2.8 billion in net outflows this year.

SunEdison is the largest contributor to greenfield projects in India, spending an estimated $4.2 billion on three projects. The company’s largest project includes a new joint venture solar photovoltaic manufacturing facility.