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This is an archive article published on May 25, 2012

Assets sale: ‘MNCs repatriate $10 bn FDI’

MNCs repatriated FDIs worth about Rs 60,000 cr by sale of their Indian assets in 2011.

MNCs repatriated FDIs worth USD 10.7 billion (about Rs 60,000 crore) by sale of their Indian assets in 2011,amid problems like slowing economic growth,rising business costs and regulatory uncertainties,global financial giant Nomura said in a research report today.

The funds pulled back by multi-national companies (MNCs) during 2011 marked a significant jump from USD 7.2 billion in 2010 and just USD 3.1 billion in 2009,the report said.

“Global deleveraging may have forced companies to sell their Indian assets and repatriate funds to their home country,” it said.

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“At the same time,domestic push factors such as slowing potential growth,the high cost of doing business and regulatory uncertainty have weakened the investment climate,likely causing this erosion. This is not a good sign,” it added.

The report said FDI into India has risen exponentially since 2000,but over the last three years some of this money is being repatriated.

“After keeping their investments broadly intact until 2008,MNCs repatriated USD 3.1 billion in 2009,USD 7.2 billion in 2010 and a peak of USD 10.7 billion in 2011,” it said.

The report said it expects services and real estate sectors have probably seen the maximum outflow.

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In 2011,India attracted foreign direct investment (FDI) worth USD 27.57 billion,higher than USD 21 billion in 2010.

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