Market News: Retail Stock Buying Hits Lowest Level Since 2020 — Net Purchases Fall 58% to $13 Billion as Individual Stock Picks Drop 71%
2026-07-11 10:55:59
Retail investor net purchases of US stocks fell to $13 billion over the past month — the lowest level since 2020 — according to VandaTrack data released July 11. Since the start of 2026, monthly net purchases have decreased by $18 billion, a drop of 58%. Individual stock net purchases fell even more sharply — down 71% to $3.2 billion, the lowest level since the first quarter of 2020. The macro picture behind these numbers is precise: retail investors are now selling stocks at almost the same pace as they are buying, effectively neutralizing the net buying impulse that drove retail market participation to record levels in 2024 and 2025.The Numbers in DetailThe 58% collapse in monthly net purchases from January 2026 levels reflects a broad-based pullback in retail conviction across both ETFs and individual stocks. The ETF component has held up better than direct stock picking — the 71% decline in individual stock net purchases to $3.2 billion against the overall 58% decline in total net purchases suggests retail investors are retreating from specific stock selection more aggressively than from passive index exposure. Individual stock picking at its lowest since Q1 2020 means retail's active participation in equity markets has effectively returned to the levels that preceded the meme stock era, the crypto boom, and the AI trade that drove Nasdaq gains of 16% in the first half of 2026.The $500 billion in total retail holdings reaching a record — more than double the mid-2024 level — provides the context for why net purchases are cooling: retail investors are not abandoning the market, they are sitting on large accumulated positions and managing them more conservatively, selling into strength and buying into weakness at roughly equal rates rather than systematically adding exposure.Why Retail Is Pulling BackThe VandaTrack data captures the retail response to the same macro environment that has driven institutional Bitcoin ETF outflows and six consecutive weeks of crypto redemptions. The Federal Reserve's hawkish June dot plot, the Reuters poll consensus of no rate cuts through end of 2027, Japanese bond yields at a 30-year high pushing US Treasury yields to test 4.5%, and the Iran ceasefire collapse sending oil up 5% — the combination has created the most uncertain macro backdrop for risk assets since the 2022 tightening cycle. Retail investors, whose net purchases had been the steady demand floor beneath the AI-driven equity bull market, are responding to that uncertainty by reducing conviction bets.The individual stock collapse to $3.2 billion is particularly revealing. When retail investors lose conviction in specific stock selection, it typically signals a sentiment shift from "I know which companies will win" to "I don't know what happens next" — a shift from growth-oriented specific conviction to defensive or passive positioning. The AI trade that drove retail into Nvidia, AMD, and semiconductor names with specific thesis-driven buying is losing momentum at exactly the same time institutional positioning in those names is being questioned.The Crypto ConnectionThe cooling of retail US equity buying is directly relevant to Bitcoin and crypto markets through a specific mechanism: retail capital that is not flowing into individual stocks and AI equity themes is not flowing into crypto either. The VandaTrack data suggests the same risk appetite decline that is reducing retail US stock net purchases is also reducing the retail bid that has historically provided the speculative demand layer beneath institutional Bitcoin ETF flows. Total retail holdings at a record $500 billion means the capital exists — it is parked, not fled. When macro conditions shift sufficiently to restore retail conviction, both equity and crypto markets have a substantial pool of on-the-sidelines retail capital available to re-engage. July 14's CPI print is the nearest scheduled catalyst for that conviction to either restore or further erode.
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