For years, exchange-traded funds were one of Wall Street’s great success stories. ETFs gave ordinary investors cheap diversification, instant market exposure, and lower fees than traditional mutual funds. Instead of picking individual stocks, investors could buy the whole market with a single click. It was investing simplified.
But the ETF market has grown into something far larger than many investors realize. According to World Bank data, the number of publicly traded U.S. companies has fallen to 3,908 from more than 8,000 in the late 1990s. At the same time, there are now roughly 4,900 ETFs trading in the U.S..
With 1,000 more ETFs than stocks, what happens when thousands of ETFs own the same shrinking pool of stocks — and investors suddenly rush to sell at the same time?
Granted, ETFs themselves are not inherently dangerous. Broad index funds tracking the S&P 500 remain among the safest and lowest-cost tools available to long-term investors. But the structure surrounding ETFs has changed. Leveraged funds, inverse products, thematic ETFs, and options-based strategies now make up a much larger portion of daily trading volume than they did even five years ago.
In a downturn, that could matter.
The Market Is Becoming Increasingly Concentrated
The largest ETFs in the world are heavily concentrated in mega-cap technology companies. Funds tracking the S&P 500 now allocate roughly one-third of their assets to a small handful of stocks, including Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL | AAPL Price Prediction), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META), and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG).
That concentration creates efficiency during bull markets. As money flows into index funds, the largest stocks receive the largest inflows. The cycle reinforces itself. But concentration also works in reverse.
If investors begin pulling money out of ETFs during a downturn, funds do not sell random stocks. They sell the same underlying holdings everyone else owns, too. That can increase correlations across the market and pressure even fundamentally strong companies.
Surprisingly, this is not just theoretical. During the March 2020 pandemic crash, correlations between stocks surged as investors sold index products broadly instead of evaluating companies individually.
Leveraged ETFs Add Another Layer of Risk
The bigger concern may not be traditional index ETFs at all. It may be the explosive growth in leveraged products.
According to Reuters, leveraged single-stock ETFs account for roughly 8% of total U.S. exchange trading volume. It also reported that 275 leveraged single-stock ETFs launched since January 2025 alone. These products behave differently from standard ETFs.
A normal S&P 500 ETF can largely absorb investor trading without forcing major changes in the underlying portfolio. Leveraged ETFs cannot. They must rebalance constantly to maintain their target leverage ratios.
That means:
- Bullish leveraged ETFs often must buy after rallies
- And sell after declines
Inverse products can create similar feedback loops in the opposite direction.
In short, some ETF structures can mechanically amplify volatility. That does not mean ETFs will cause the next crash. Markets still fall because of recessions, earnings contractions, credit stress, or policy mistakes. But ETFs can accelerate market moves once panic begins.
Liquidity Matters More Than Investors Think
Bond ETFs may present another stress point. Many bond ETFs hold assets that do not trade continuously, including high-yield debt, municipal bonds, and bank loans. During calm periods, ETFs improve liquidity because investors can trade ETF shares instead of the underlying bonds. But in periods of stress, the ETF may become the market’s primary pricing mechanism.
That is important because liquidity can disappear quickly during panic selling. Discounts between ETF prices and underlying bond values widened sharply during both the 2020 crash and parts of the 2022 bond market selloff.
That said, ETFs also provide enormous benefits. They lowered costs for millions of investors and democratized access to diversified portfolios. Long-term investors using broad-market ETFs responsibly are not the problem. The issue is crowding.
Ultimately, today’s market increasingly consists of thousands of investment wrappers holding many of the same underlying securities. If everyone heads for the exit simultaneously, price swings could become sharper and faster than investors have grown accustomed to over the last decade.
Key Takeaway
Investors should not fear ETFs. But they should understand how market structure has evolved. Broad index ETFs remain powerful long-term wealth-building tools. Regardless, the rise of leveraged products, concentrated index ownership, and rules-based trading strategies means future downturns could unfold differently than past bear markets.
The next crash may not begin with ETFs. But ETFs could make the trip down happen a lot faster.
