Key Takeaways:
- US-listed ETF assets reached $15.6 trillion, nearly doubling in two years
- Year-to-date net inflows exceeded $1 trillion, on pace for a record $2 trillion
- Active ETFs captured 40% of inflows while holding 13% of industry AUM
Key Takeaways:

The US ETF industry has entered an expansion cycle without historical precedent, with total assets approaching $16 trillion and year-to-date net inflows exceeding $1 trillion for the first time at the halfway mark.
The US-listed exchange-traded fund universe swelled to $15.6 trillion in total assets as of June 30, nearly doubling in size over the past two years, according to Goldman Sachs data. Net inflows crossed the $1 trillion threshold in the first six months of 2026, putting the industry on pace for a record $2 trillion full-year haul that would surpass 2025's total by more than 33 percent.
"The scale and persistence of inflows this year reflect a structural shift in how investors access markets, with active strategies and concentrated thematic products capturing an outsized share," said Chris Lucas, head of ETF business at Goldman Sachs. "We have never seen this combination of velocity and breadth."
June alone delivered $193 billion in net inflows, the second-highest monthly total in Goldman Sachs' dataset. Five of the industry's largest monthly inflow periods have occurred in the past seven months. Active ETFs absorbed roughly $400 billion year-to-date, representing about 40 percent of total industry inflows while accounting for only 13 percent of total assets under management. The gap between flow share and AUM share underscores the velocity of investor rotation into active vehicles.
Trading volumes have accelerated in tandem. First-half aggregate turnover exceeded $40 trillion, a 50 percent surge from the same period in 2025. June posted $7 trillion in total volume, also the second-highest month on record. Leveraged ETFs drove a disproportionate share of the activity: their $1.1 trillion in notional June volume set a monthly record, and their total economic exposure of $430 billion against $175 billion in assets produced a leverage multiplier that amplified overall market liquidity.
Concentrated Thematic Products Reshape Flow Patterns
The rise of concentrated thematic ETFs has begun to cannibalize flows from broad-market legacy funds in ways that alter sector-level capital allocation. The DRAM storage-chip thematic ETF surpassed the 26-year-old Korea ETF EWY in total assets, a milestone that illustrates the speed of structural rotation. EWY gained nearly 50 percent in net asset value since April yet recorded roughly $20 billion in net outflows over the same period, as investors migrated to a more precise exposure vehicle. Goldman Sachs estimates the two funds share about 46 percent portfolio overlap, meaning EWY had functioned as a proxy for international semiconductor exposure until a dedicated alternative emerged.
The US ETF count has reached approximately 5,400 vehicles, exceeding the roughly 4,000 publicly traded US companies. More than 770 new ETFs have launched year-to-date, with 54 percent employing derivatives and 33 percent classified as leveraged or inverse products. Goldman Sachs expects derivative-based and concentrated thematic issuance to remain the dominant trend in the second half, supported by a pipeline of pending registrations.
Fidelity Investments joined the ETF share-class movement in June, converting three mutual funds into dual-share-class structures, following similar moves by four other asset managers. Dimensional Fund Advisors also launched a discretionary managed portfolio service using only its own funds, signaling further convergence between active management and the ETF wrapper.
The implications extend beyond the ETF industry itself. With leveraged products generating nearly $3 trillion in gross exposure in June alone — equivalent to roughly 40 percent of all US-listed ETF notional volume — the amplification mechanism has become a systemic feature of US equity market structure. If the current inflow pace holds through December, the industry will add more than $4 trillion in net new assets in a single calendar year, a sum larger than the entire US ETF market as recently as 2019.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.