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Why retail investors are ditching broader index bets for selective trades

Retail investors, long considered one of the strongest pillars supporting the US stock market since the pandemic, are becoming increasingly selective as market leadership shifts rapidly and alternative investment opportunities gain traction.

Recent data suggest individual investors are rotating between themes rather than making broad-based bets on the stock market.

At the same time, a new Bank of America Private Bank survey shows younger wealthy investors are increasingly questioning whether traditional stocks and bonds can continue to generate above-average returns, with many allocating more capital to private markets, crypto and other alternatives.

Retail traders rotate between market themes

A Bloomberg report citing Vanda Research said the gap between cash flowing into and out of the stock market over the past four weeks has narrowed to $13 billion, the lowest level since the Covid-19 pandemic.

The trend suggests retail investors are buying and selling stocks more aggressively while showing less conviction toward the broader S&P 500 Index.

Instead, investors have been chasing individual themes as market leadership shifts.

Retail traders have rotated from energy and silver stocks to software companies, then to semiconductor names, before moving into space-related stocks following SpaceX’s public listing in June.

Viraj Patel, global macro strategist at Vanda Research, said the market environment has become increasingly dependent on stock selection.

“A selective retail investor is joining what is a very selective institutional investor – one where 2026 has really been a stock picker’s world,” said Patel.

Patel added that reduced exposure to US equities does not necessarily signal a bearish outlook for the broader market.

Instead, he said retail investors appear increasingly willing to pursue emerging investment themes before quickly moving on.

“The 2026 retail investor is very different to anything we’ve really seen in the post-Covid years,” Patel said.

Sentiment data also reflect growing caution.

According to the American Association of Individual Investors, bearish investors have outnumbered bullish respondents in all but four weeks since mid-February.

In the latest survey for the week ended July 8, 37% of respondents expected stocks to decline over the next six months, compared with 36% who were optimistic.

High valuations and new investment options influence behavior

Analysts say elevated technology valuations and rapid sector rotations are making investors more cautious.

Bret Kenwell, US investment analyst at Etoro, believes recent weakness in semiconductor stocks may be encouraging retail investors to wait for better entry points.

Vanda Research also pointed to the growing popularity of crypto trading, prediction markets and sports betting as alternative destinations for speculative capital.

Retail participation in US equity trading has moderated accordingly.

Individual investors accounted for 17.2% of total US equity trading volume during the first quarter of 2026, down from 20.5% a year earlier, although still above pre-pandemic levels, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

Even so, retail investors continue to selectively deploy capital.

JPMorgan data showed they purchased a net $8.9 billion of equities this week, exceeding the 12-month average of $6.8 billion. Technology stocks attracted the largest inflows at $712 million, followed by communication services at $617 million.

“There hasn’t been a clear theme across AI and tech. Even the Mag 7 has stopped trading like a bloc,” Vanda’s Patel said.

Younger wealthy investors embrace alternatives

The trend extends beyond retail traders.

According to the 2026 Bank of America Private Bank Study of Wealthy Americans, 67% of Gen Z and Millennial investors with at least $3 million in investable assets believe traditional stocks and bonds can no longer generate above-average returns.

As a result, younger affluent investors are increasing allocations to private equity, real estate, cryptocurrency, and emerging technology investments.

The survey found that 58% already own digital assets, while nearly nine in 10 expect to increase investments in alternatives over the coming years.

Among respondents with at least $25 million in wealth, 77% believe greater opportunities exist in private markets than public markets.

The findings suggest that as wealth transfers to younger generations, investment portfolios may continue shifting beyond publicly traded stocks toward assets that offer exposure to earlier-stage growth opportunities.

The post Why retail investors are ditching broader index bets for selective trades appeared first on Invezz

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