--- title: "The ETF inflow craze extends to 2026: Structural capital shift accelerates, with active and international targets becoming the new focus" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/271588611.md" description: "In 2025, net inflows into ETFs reached a record high of $1.49 trillion, and the momentum continued into the beginning of 2026, with over $15 billion flowing in during the first week. The SEC exemption is expected to take effect by mid-year, potentially releasing $7 trillion in capital to shift towards ETFs. The share of active ETFs is expected to rise to over 40%, with international equity and fixed income ETFs attracting strong capital. Investors prefer low-cost, transparent exchange-traded instruments, with active ETFs attracting $443 billion, accounting for 34% of total inflows. Vanguard and iShares are the main issuers, with the top 20 ETFs attracting $79.24 billion before November, indicating a structural shift in capital allocation" datetime: "2026-01-05T02:02:29.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/271588611.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/271588611.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/271588611.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/271588611.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/271588611.md) # The ETF inflow craze extends to 2026: Structural capital shift accelerates, with active and international targets becoming the new focus - In 2025, ETF net inflows reached a record $1.49 trillion, and the momentum continued into 2026, with over $15 billion inflows recorded in the first week, led by active and thematic ETFs. - Regulatory catalysts are unlocking potential, with the SEC exemption expected to take effect mid-year, potentially releasing $7 trillion in capital from mutual funds to ETFs, with the share of active ETFs expected to rise above 40%. - The trend of diversification is evident, with international stocks and fixed income ETFs attracting strong inflows, and crypto ETFs seeing over $1 billion in inflows in the first week, as investors actively avoid the risks of high valuations in the U.S. As 2026 begins, investors reflect on the performance of the ETF market in 2025, realizing that it was not only a record year for capital inflows but also a key turning point in the structural change of global capital allocation. U.S.-listed ETFs saw a net inflow of **$1.49 trillion** for the year, doubling from 2024, with total assets expanding to $13.5 trillion. This wave of capital not only continued the momentum of over $1 trillion in 2024 but also highlighted the long-term trend of ETFs capturing market dominance from mutual funds, as investors prefer low-cost, transparent, and flexible exchange-traded instruments. Category distribution shows a trend of diversification: Stock ETFs remain the mainstay, attracting over $650 billion in U.S. stocks and $270 billion in international stocks, benefiting from strong overseas markets and a weak dollar (the U.S. dollar index fell 9.4% in 2025). Fixed income ETFs saw inflows of $330.6 billion, with bond ETFs contributing nearly $300 billion in the first nine months, accounting for about 30% of the annual inflow. Active ETFs became the biggest highlight, with inflows of $443 billion, accounting for 34% of total inflows, and 84% of newly issued products being active, reflecting investors' pursuit of excess returns beyond indices. Thematic and alternative ETFs also performed well, with structured outcome funds (such as buffered and defined outcome products) reaching $86.75 billion in assets, as issuers expanded their offerings in gold and bitcoin-related products. Competition among issuers is fierce, with Vanguard leading with $420.8 billion in inflows, followed closely by iShares with $373 billion. In November alone, the top 20 ETFs attracted $79.24 billion, with passive giants like VOO and IVV setting records. Analysts point out that this wave of inflows signals a structural change in capital allocation: **ETFs are becoming the primary tool for both institutional and retail investors**, with regulatory changes (such as the SEC's expected exemption allowing mutual funds to convert to ETF shares) further accelerating growth. The rapid expansion of active ETFs marks a shift for investors from purely passive indices to strategies that combine active management; the strong inflows into fixed income and international stocks indicate that, amid high valuations in the U.S., investors are actively seeking diversification and sources of yield. Analysts note that in 2025, active ETFs saw inflows of $443 billion (accounting for 34% of total inflows), with 84% of newly issued products being active, marking a shift for investors from purely passive indices to strategies that combine active management In 2026, this trend is expected to become more pronounced, with the proportion of active ETFs projected to rise above 40%. Institutional investors, in particular, favor stock-picking abilities that can outperform the market. During the transition period from AI hype to ROI realization, more flexible sources of alpha will be provided. The SEC's exemption order, expected to take effect mid-year, will allow mutual funds to convert directly into ETF shares, potentially unlocking $7 trillion in institutional capital. This not only reduces conversion costs but also accelerates the replacement of traditional mutual funds by ETFs—total assets in ETFs are estimated to exceed $15 trillion by 2026. Strong inflows into fixed income and international equities also reflect the rotation demand under high valuations in the U.S. International equity ETFs are expected to attract $270 billion in 2025, continuing into 2026, with Asia (China's consumption recovery, South Korea's AI supply chain) and Europe (profit growth expectations of 12%) becoming focal points. Fixed income ETFs will benefit from the Fed's interest rate cut path, with accelerated inflows into medium- and long-term bonds and credit products, expected to contribute over $400 billion for the year. The explosion of crypto ETFs will be a new highlight in 2026: Bitcoin ETFs saw inflows of over $1 billion in the first week (led by BlackRock IBIT), with Ethereum and thematic products following suit, indicating that investors view crypto as a formal allocation of high-growth risk assets. However, if the market corrects in 2026 (with the S&P 500 valuation nearing a forward P/E of 30), interest rate cuts stall, the economy slows, or a trade war reignites inflation, the momentum of funds may quickly reverse. Crowded positions, such as the seven AI giants and U.S. tech, carry high correction risks, while international and crypto targets, although providing diversification, may amplify volatility. JPMorgan predicts that if the Fed only cuts rates once, ETF inflows may slow by 20%; conversely, continued easing could push total inflows above $1.7 trillion. Overall, the structural shift initiated by record ETF inflows in 2025 will further deepen in 2026 under regulatory catalysts, macro support, and risk rotation. Investors should monitor the inflow trends of international stocks, active and crypto ETFs as leading indicators of diversification levels, seizing this structural opportunity and adjusting allocations in a timely manner to capture growth dividends ## Related News & Research - [The 4 Questions Investors Should Ask Before Buying Any ETF](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281549873.md) - [ETF League Tables: Pacer ETFs Shed $21M](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281576130.md) - [Is XUT the Perfect ETF for Your TFSA?](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281064648.md) - [HKEX on Expanding ETF Offerings](https://longbridge.com/en/news/280764173.md) - [Strive Inc Expands Role in Digital Credit ETF](https://longbridge.com/en/news/281038704.md)