Gate News reports that on March 24, retail investors in the United States showed a clear decline in enthusiasm for the stock market. The latest data indicates that retail trading volume now accounts for 8.1% of total market trading volume, nearly halving from the November 15, 2025 peak of 15%, reaching the lowest level since Q3 2024 and approaching the levels seen during the 2022 bear market.
This shift reflects a rapid contraction in risk appetite. The Kobeissi Letter notes that retail investors are pulling out of highly volatile assets and shifting toward waiting or allocating more stable assets. Meanwhile, activity in the options market has also decreased, with zero-day to expiration options (0DTE) trading dropping to 57%, the lowest since early 2025, indicating a significant cooling of short-term speculative behavior.
In terms of capital flows, safe-haven assets have become the main recipients. Since Q2 2025, retail investors have accumulated over $70 billion in gold ETFs, with inflows accelerating notably over the past six months. Additionally, silver ETFs have attracted over $10 billion in the past year, further confirming rising demand for defensive allocations.
This capital shift occurs amid increasing macroeconomic uncertainty, including inflation pressures, unclear interest rate paths, and geopolitical tensions. In contrast, digital assets like Bitcoin, despite their high liquidity, have not yet fully absorbed the flight-to-safety capital exiting traditional markets, leading to a market structure that is becoming more segmented.
From an asset allocation perspective, retail investors are reducing leverage and high-frequency trading exposure, gradually exiting short-term speculation, and shifting toward medium- and long-term defensive strategies. The decline in stock participation, contraction in derivatives trading, and inflows into precious metals collectively characterize the current market.
In the short term, whether this trend continues will depend on macroeconomic developments and the volatility of risk assets. If market uncertainty remains high, conservative retail allocations may persist, exerting ongoing influence on liquidity in stocks and crypto markets.