In the past three months, the net inflow of US ETFs has surpassed $400 billion. The sources of this money are quite interesting—401(k) retirement accounts, various pension funds, advisory algorithm models, target date funds, dynamic rebalancing strategies, and these institutional capital pools are all involved.
The key point is that the decision-making logic of these funds is completely different. They do not worry about "whether it is expensive now."
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FlashLoanPhantom
· 10h ago
Pensions are buying up frantically, is this even possible? 401k is still quietly adding to its holdings.
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GasFeeCrier
· 10h ago
Retail investors are still struggling, but the big players have already gotten on board.
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FlatlineTrader
· 10h ago
401k dads are piling up wildly, retail investors are still hesitating whether to buy or not, hilarious
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ApeWithAPlan
· 10h ago
400 billion USD is flooding in crazily. I see through this now—it's not retail investors buying at all; it's just the pension funds of the big players automatically sweeping up the market.
In the past three months, the net inflow of US ETFs has surpassed $400 billion. The sources of this money are quite interesting—401(k) retirement accounts, various pension funds, advisory algorithm models, target date funds, dynamic rebalancing strategies, and these institutional capital pools are all involved.
The key point is that the decision-making logic of these funds is completely different. They do not worry about "whether it is expensive now."