Nifty 50 could potentially reach 42,000 by 2029 if historical flow patterns and domestic growth momentum persist, according to a report by CNI InfoXchange, which analyzed past trends, particularly after significant selling by foreign portfolio investors.
FII Flows Driving Market Resurgence
The report, titled “Nifty’s Resurgence With the Return of FII,” notes that equities have increasingly become driven by capital flows rather than strictly earnings over the past several years. It points out that approximately $54 billion in FII inflows from 2019 to September 2021 contributed to a 63% rally in the Nifty 50. Additionally, another $45 billion in inflows from July 2022 to September 2024 resulted in a 68% increase in the benchmark index.
The market structure has fundamentally improved through heightened participation from domestic institutional investors, systematic investment plan (SIP) inflows, and a growing alternative investment fund landscape. These factors have collectively mitigated the market’s susceptibility to foreign selling. Even during phases of significant FII outflows, market corrections have tended to remain manageable.
The report anticipates that if India secures an additional $50 billion in FII inflows over the next two years, historical flow-to-return dynamics could propel the Nifty toward the 40,000-42,000 range by 2028-29.
Factors Supporting Nifty’s Climb to 42,000
The CNI InfoXchange report identifies several conditions that could facilitate such a rally. Key among these are sustained GDP growth exceeding 7%, a supportive Reserve Bank of India (RBI) policy, extensive infrastructure and manufacturing reforms, robust domestic liquidity, and a continued capital expenditure (capex) cycle supported by government spending.
Moreover, the report forecasts that India’s weight in the MSCI Emerging Markets Index may rise to 23.5-25% by FY28, potentially surpassing China. The total foreign portfolio and foreign direct investment inflow potential is projected to range between $160 billion and $180 billion over FY27 and FY28.
The bullish scenario for Indian equities hinges on strong earnings growth, continued SIP inflows, a stable inflation environment, and supportive global liquidity conditions.
Sectoral Winners in Future Market Cycles
From a sectoral perspective, capital goods, infrastructure, banking, real estate, defense, and power have been acknowledged as the strongest outperformers during prior market upcycles. Between July 2022 and September 2024, capital goods and infrastructure stocks surged by 138%, while real estate stocks increased by 132% due to strong government capex initiatives and recovering residential demand. Banking and financial sectors saw a 98% gain, driven by improved asset quality and robust credit growth.
The report expects these sectors to lead the next market phase, emphasizing infrastructure and defense as significant beneficiaries of India’s manufacturing boost and increasing order volumes. Banking could particularly benefit from higher credit-to-GDP penetration, while discretionary consumption trends may bolster the automotive and consumption-linked sectors.
Acknowledged Risks Despite Positive Outlook
Despite the positive outlook, the report warns that the journey to 42,000 is contingent on global macroeconomic stability. Risks such as oil price fluctuations, geopolitical issues in the Middle East, a reversal in global liquidity conditions, and potential disruptions in the global artificial intelligence investment landscape could create volatility and valuation corrections.
Nevertheless, the report maintains that India remains among the few large global markets demonstrating structural growth acceleration, supported by favorable demographics, manufacturing expansion, domestic liquidity, and increasing global investor allocations.
Published on May 14, 2026







