ETF money flooded US markets in 2025 at a pace never seen before. With about a week left on the calendar, the numbers are already locked in. The $13 trillion ETFETF money flooded US markets in 2025 at a pace never seen before. With about a week left on the calendar, the numbers are already locked in. The $13 trillion ETF

Over 1,000 new ETFs hit US markets in $1.4 trillion record inflows in 2025

ETF money flooded US markets in 2025 at a pace never seen before. With about a week left on the calendar, the numbers are already locked in. The $13 trillion ETF industry smashed records across flows, product launches, and trading activity.

Inflows alone hit $1.4 trillion, beating last year’s all-time high. New funds crossed 1,000 launches. Trading volume also set a fresh peak.

This run did not come quietly. The ETF world moved higher as US stocks kept grinding up. The S&P 500 logged a third straight year of double-digit gains. That happened even as the index chopped sideways from October.

Markets dealt with doubts around massive AI spending plans and open questions on when the Federal Reserve cuts rates. Still, demand stayed strong, and ETF trading volume kept climbing into year-end.

Stock gains and product launches drive historic growth

US-listed funds pulled in cash at a speed that surprised even long-time watchers. ETF inflows broke last year’s record before December even ended. More than 1,000 products hit the market in a single year.

That has never happened before. Bloomberg data shows the last time flows, launches, and volume all peaked together was 2021.

The S&P 500 helped push the surge. The index gained for a third year in a row, even after slowing in recent months. Since October, the benchmark moved in a tight range.

Investors stayed cautious as questions grew around AI spending by large tech firms and the future path of interest rates. Despite that, money kept moving into new and existing funds.

History still hangs over the market. After the strong run in 2021, risk assets fell hard the next year. The S&P 500 dropped 19% in 2022.

Government bonds did not protect investors as the Federal Reserve raised rates fast. During that stretch, trading volume stayed high, but flows and launches cooled as volatility hit portfolios.

Some expect a repeat of that pattern. Bloomberg Intelligence senior analyst Eric Balchunas said, “We think there’s going to be some reality check next year. Because of how perfect the year seemed to be for ETFs, you kind of want to brace for it.”

Crypto funds see outflows as markets eye year-end rally

Cracks already showed up in crypto-linked products late in December. On December 23 ET, Bitcoin spot ETFs posted a net outflow of $189 million. That marked the fourth straight day of redemptions.

BlackRock’s IBIT led the move, logging a single-day outflow of $157 million. Ethereum spot ETFs also slipped, with $95.52 million leaving the group. All nine products reported zero inflows that day.

Even with those outflows, investors stayed focused on the final trading days of the year. Many watched for the Santa Claus rally, which runs from the last five trading sessions of December through the first two sessions of January. That window spans from December 24 to January 5 this year.

LPL Financial data shows the S&P 500 averages a 1.3% gain during that stretch. Positive results happen 78% of the time. Outside that period, the index averages a 0.3% return over seven days, with gains showing up 58% of the time.

Markets ended Tuesday on a firm note. The S&P 500 closed up about 0.5% at 6,909.79, setting a new record close. Futures later traded near flat.

Dow futures slipped 25 points, or 0.05%. S&P 500 futures dipped 0.05%, while Nasdaq 100 futures stayed little changed. Tech stocks led the session, with Alphabet, Nvidia, Broadcom, and Amazon pushing indexes higher for a fourth straight day.

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