- Vanguard now manages $4.39 trillion across 116 US-listed ETFs, overtaking BlackRock’s $4.36 trillion after a $13 billion single-day inflow pushed it past the incumbent that had held the top spot since 2003.
- Vanguard’s ETFs have pulled in $291 billion in 2026 year-to-date — more than $170 billion ahead of BlackRock’s $120 billion — driven largely by the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO), which became the first ETF ever to hit $1 trillion in assets last week.
- Despite the assets crown, BlackRock still generates far more fee revenue: its average asset-weighted fee is 16 basis points versus Vanguard’s 4 basis points, meaning BlackRock earns four times as much per dollar managed.
- The shift reflects two decades of structural change in investing — buy-and-hold retail investors and financial advisers consistently added to Vanguard’s low-cost index funds through every market cycle, while BlackRock’s broader product lineup and institutional client base produced more volatile flows.
What Happened?
Vanguard Group has ended BlackRock’s 20-year run as the largest US ETF issuer. A single-day inflow of $13 billion pushed Vanguard’s total ETF assets to approximately $4.39 trillion, eclipsing BlackRock’s $4.36 trillion across more than 480 funds. The milestone caps a multi-decade rebalancing of the industry: BlackRock once commanded roughly 60% of total US ETF assets; Vanguard’s relentless accumulation of buy-and-hold retail dollars has steadily closed that gap. VOO, Vanguard’s S&P 500 tracker, has been the primary engine — it became the first ETF in history to reach $1 trillion in assets last week and has taken in nearly $113 billion in 2026 alone.
Why It Matters?
The handover at the top of the ETF industry is both a business story and a philosophical vindication. Vanguard was founded by Jack Bogle specifically to build a company that would never suffer the performance chasing and client defection that plagued actively managed funds. That mission — ultra-low costs, index-based, buy-and-hold oriented — has proven extraordinarily durable. At 4 basis points average fee versus 16 for BlackRock, Vanguard captures a fraction of the revenue per dollar managed, but its investor base is structurally stickier: individual investors and financial advisers who buy and hold through every cycle rather than institutional clients who may rotate in and out for tactical reasons. The flip side is that BlackRock remains the far more profitable ETF business on a per-asset basis, and its broad product lineup — covering nearly every asset class — gives it exposure to faster-growing niches like active ETFs, cryptocurrency, and alternatives that Vanguard largely avoids.
What’s Next?
Whether Vanguard holds the top spot will depend on whether its core audience maintains its characteristic calm through market volatility — history suggests it will. BlackRock is not standing still: it has been expanding aggressively into active ETFs and alternative strategy wrappers that carry higher fees and appeal to a different investor base than Vanguard’s core. The broader ETF industry now stands at $15.2 trillion in the US alone, and the race to capture flows from the next generation of retail investors — through 401(k) plan menus, financial advisers, and direct indexing platforms — will determine whether Vanguard’s lead widens or BlackRock recovers. Jack Bogle famously called ETF investors “fruitcakes and lunatic fringe” — it is a measure of how thoroughly he was wrong about the wrapper, even as his underlying mission triumphed completely.
Source: Bloomberg













