Retail Investors Shift Away From S&P 500, Favor Hot Stock Trades as Net Inflows Hit 12-Year Low

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According to Vanda Research, retail investors are retreating from broad market exposure, with net inflows and outflows in equities narrowing to $13 billion over the past four weeks as of July 8—the lowest level since the COVID-19 pandemic. Rather than holding diversified positions, retail traders are increasingly rotating between individual hot topics and sectors, selling stocks nearly as aggressively as they buy them.

Retail focus has rapidly shifted throughout 2026, initially targeting energy and precious metals stocks, then pivoting to software, semiconductors, and most recently SpaceX and space-related companies following SpaceX's June listing. Market sentiment has also cooled; data from the American Association of Individual Investors shows that bearish sentiment has exceeded bullish sentiment in all but four weeks since mid-February, with 37% of respondents expecting stock declines over the next six months versus 36% expecting gains. Retail investors now account for 17.2% of total U.S. stock trading volume in Q1 2026, down from 20.5% a year earlier, though JPMorgan Chase data shows net retail buying of $8.9 billion this week, concentrated primarily in technology stocks.

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