流出超2000亿元!ETF资金迁移路线图曝光
Zheng Quan Shi Bao Wang·2026-01-18 23:36

Group 1 - The core viewpoint of the article highlights a significant internal shift in the ETF market, with funds moving away from broad-based ETFs to narrower, high-volatility products [1][2][5] - Year-to-date, over 200 billion yuan has been withdrawn from broad-based ETFs, with 14 ETFs experiencing a net outflow exceeding 30 billion yuan, all of which are broad-based ETFs [2][4] - The largest stock ETF in China has seen its scale drop from 400 billion yuan to 300 billion yuan, while the second-largest has decreased from 300 billion yuan to 200 billion yuan [2] Group 2 - In contrast, narrow-based ETFs, cross-border ETFs, and commodity ETFs have attracted significant inflows, with cross-border ETFs growing by 746.32 billion yuan, surpassing the 1 trillion yuan mark for the first time [4][6] - The South China Nonferrous ETF has become the only product to receive over 10 billion yuan in net inflows this year, driven by rising base metal prices [6][8] - The active trading environment in the A-share market and the structural differentiation in performance have led to increased demand for high-elasticity assets, further supporting the inflow into narrow-based ETFs [7][9] Group 3 - Fund companies focusing on narrow-based ETFs are experiencing significant growth, with companies like GF Fund and Yongying Fund expanding their ETF scales rapidly [7][8] - The current market dynamics suggest that narrow-based ETFs are becoming a key driver of growth in the ETF sector, especially for smaller fund companies looking to compete against larger institutions [9][10] - There is a concern that narrow-based ETFs may be used as speculative tools rather than for long-term asset allocation, which could lead to increased trading costs and volatility for investors [10]