January flew by as markets got caught up in the metal frenzy. Morningstar's fund flow report is out, and it delivers some compelling insights. Here are the key takeaways. | US ETFs pulled in a record $156 billion in January 2026, the strongest January on record. But the headline doesn't tell the full story. We are witnessing a dramatic rotation away from US tech concentration and into international equities, bonds, and natural resources. Investors aren't chasing growth anymore — they're diversifying defensively. |
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| The $51 Billion International Rotation | International equity ETFs pulled in $51 billion in January — one-third of all ETF flows — despite representing just 15% of total ETF assets. | Breakdown: | Emerging markets: $19B (IEMG: $9B, EEM: $4B). Foreign large-blend: $15B (VXUS: $6B). Market share: 15% of ETF assets, 33% of January flows.
| Performance gap (January 2026): | IEMG (emerging markets): +7.94%. IEFA (developed international): +5.13%. IVV (US S&P 500): +1.47%.
| What it means: Total return forecasts favor international stocks over the next decade. US concentration concerns are accelerating the shift, potentially establishing a structural reallocation. If this pace continues, US mega-cap valuations may face sustained pressure. |
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| | Bond Positioning: $46 Billion Says Inflation Isn't Dead | Taxable bond ETFs pulled in a record $46 billion, ranking second only to international equity. | Breakdown: | Intermediate core bond: $10B (largest fixed-income category). Ultrashort bond: $5B+ (SGOV leading as a cash proxy). Long government bond: -$1.4B (TLT outflows). Top beneficiaries: BND and VCIT combined ~$7B.
| Curve positioning: | Front end: Maximum inflows (yield without duration risk). Middle: Strong demand (intermediate corporates). Long end: Outflows (investors avoiding duration exposure).
| What it means: Front-end yields remain attractive (4–5%), reducing the need to take long-duration risk. Investors aren't betting on a recession (they would buy TLT) or aggressive Fed cuts (they would extend duration). This is "yield-without-risk" positioning — capturing front-end carry and waiting. This changes only if the Fed signals aggressive easing or recession fears spike, neither of which is currently priced in. |
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| | Sector Bets: Copper, Defense, and the Semiconductor Collapse | Sector equity ETFs pulled in a record $29 billion in January — the third most of any asset class. | Breakdown: | Natural resources: $7B+ (record monthly inflow). COPX (copper miners): $2B alone. Industrials/Defense: $1B+. SHLD (defense tech): $1B+ inflows. Trading-leveraged equity: -$7B (largest monthly redemption ever).
| What traders dumped: | SOXL (3x semiconductor bull): -$6B outflows. SOXS (3x semiconductor bear): +$524M inflows. SLV (long silver): -$3B outflows. ZSL (2x inverse silver): second-largest trading tool inflow.
| Performance context: | | What it means: Markets just signaled a regime change. The 2020–2024 playbook — leveraging tech, riding semiconductors, and speculating in precious metals — is fading. The new playbook includes buying real assets (copper), geopolitical hedges (defense), and assets uncorrelated with the Nasdaq. In practice, copper and defense are quickly becoming consensus trades — which means the diversification benefit may disappear the moment everyone holds the same "diversifiers." |
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| | Duopoly Dominates the ETF Market | Asset gathering remained highly concentrated among the largest firms in January. | Breakdown: | Vanguard: $49B (31% of total ETF flows). iShares: $19B (12% of total flows). Combined: $68B (44% of all inflows).
| These two firms gathered more inflows than the next 14 providers combined. | Share class migration: | VOO (Vanguard S&P 500): +$11B inflows. SPY (SPDR S&P 500): -$10.5B outflows. IVV (iShares S&P 500): -$7.9B outflows.
| Fee advantage flywheel: | | This creates an almost unbreakable moat for scale players. | What it means: The ETF industry is consolidating into a duopoly. Investors are actively migrating from higher-cost legacy products (SPY, IVV) to lower-cost equivalents (VOO), even when tracking the same index — driven purely by cost optimization. For smaller ETF providers, the math is brutal: without scale, you can't compete on fees; without competitive fees, you can't attract flows; without flows, you can't achieve scale. |
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| Snippets that scale your voice | | Save and insert standard intros, calendar links, and bios by voice so recurring emails and updates take seconds. Wispr Flow keeps your tone and speeds execution. Try Wispr Flow for founders. | See a quick demo | | The Bottom Line | January's flows reveal defensive diversification, not panic. The concentration trade is unwinding through underperformance and reallocation — not forced selling. February flows will be the real tell: if international equities continue to capture 30%+ of inflows, the rotation is real. If flows revert back to US tech, January may prove to be a head fake. |
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| | | | | Important disclosures: This newsletter is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. All investments involve risk, including possible loss of principal. Please consult with your financial advisor before making investment decisions. |
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