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Commodities Made a Stunning Comeback in 2025, and Investors Noticed

MarketDash Editorial Team
20 hours ago
While everyone was watching stocks hit records, commodities ETFs quietly pulled in massive inflows. Gold dominated with nearly $50 billion, but silver and other real assets are telling a bigger story about how investors are thinking about risk.

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Here's something that got buried beneath the headlines about record ETF flows in 2025: while everyone was piling into stocks and bonds, commodities quietly staged one of their best years in recent memory.

U.S. ETFs pulled in a staggering $1.49 trillion in net inflows last year, setting all sorts of records. But tucked inside that number was a fascinating shift into commodities ETFs, a corner of the market that doesn't usually get this kind of attention. According to FactSet's year-end summary, commodity flows jumped 396% month-over-month in December alone, pulling nearly $10 billion into the space as investors started looking beyond the usual playbook.

Gold Stole the Show

Let's be honest: gold was the star here. Total commodity ETF flows for 2025 hit $58 billion, a massive leap from the measly $1.3 billion the prior year. Of that $58 billion, gold-linked funds accounted for approximately $48.5 billion. That's not just a preference for shiny metals. It's a statement about how investors were thinking about macro risk, inflation, and portfolio stability.

Gold prices spent much of 2025 breaking records, crossing new highs repeatedly, and the big flagship funds ate it up. SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) pulled in more than $23 billion, while iShares Gold Trust (IAU) added over $11 billion, according to ETFdb data. Globally, physically backed gold ETFs posted their strongest annual inflows ever, hitting nearly $89 billion. Geopolitical tensions, inflation uncertainty, and a softening dollar all played a role in driving that demand.

But Silver and Other Commodities Joined the Party

Gold wasn't the only metal making moves. Silver ETFs, often treated as gold's overlooked younger sibling, had a strong year as prices jumped and assets under management swelled. In markets like India, combined gold and silver ETF assets hit meaningful milestones, signaling broader interest in precious metals.

In the U.S., silver hasn't yet matched gold's flow magnitude, but the relative acceleration is hard to ignore. iShares Silver Trust (SLV) drew $3.4 billion last year, while abrdn Physical Silver Shares ETF (SIVR) added $1.2 billion. That's not chump change, and it points to a wider diversification trend among commodity investors.

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What This Means for Portfolio Construction

Equities and fixed income still dominated overall ETF demand in 2025, no question. But the pace of commodity inflows suggests something more deliberate is happening. Investors aren't just hedging anymore. They're actively tilting portfolios toward real assets and inflation anchors, building in exposures that go beyond fleeting safe-haven trades.

As we move through 2026, the big question is whether this commodity comeback broadens out. Will we see more action in industrial metals, energy-focused strategies, or multi-commodity baskets? Or will gold continue to eclipse everything else in the space? Either way, the message from 2025 is clear: commodities are back on investors' radar in a serious way.

Commodities Made a Stunning Comeback in 2025, and Investors Noticed

MarketDash Editorial Team
20 hours ago
While everyone was watching stocks hit records, commodities ETFs quietly pulled in massive inflows. Gold dominated with nearly $50 billion, but silver and other real assets are telling a bigger story about how investors are thinking about risk.

Get Market Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS alerts

Here's something that got buried beneath the headlines about record ETF flows in 2025: while everyone was piling into stocks and bonds, commodities quietly staged one of their best years in recent memory.

U.S. ETFs pulled in a staggering $1.49 trillion in net inflows last year, setting all sorts of records. But tucked inside that number was a fascinating shift into commodities ETFs, a corner of the market that doesn't usually get this kind of attention. According to FactSet's year-end summary, commodity flows jumped 396% month-over-month in December alone, pulling nearly $10 billion into the space as investors started looking beyond the usual playbook.

Gold Stole the Show

Let's be honest: gold was the star here. Total commodity ETF flows for 2025 hit $58 billion, a massive leap from the measly $1.3 billion the prior year. Of that $58 billion, gold-linked funds accounted for approximately $48.5 billion. That's not just a preference for shiny metals. It's a statement about how investors were thinking about macro risk, inflation, and portfolio stability.

Gold prices spent much of 2025 breaking records, crossing new highs repeatedly, and the big flagship funds ate it up. SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) pulled in more than $23 billion, while iShares Gold Trust (IAU) added over $11 billion, according to ETFdb data. Globally, physically backed gold ETFs posted their strongest annual inflows ever, hitting nearly $89 billion. Geopolitical tensions, inflation uncertainty, and a softening dollar all played a role in driving that demand.

But Silver and Other Commodities Joined the Party

Gold wasn't the only metal making moves. Silver ETFs, often treated as gold's overlooked younger sibling, had a strong year as prices jumped and assets under management swelled. In markets like India, combined gold and silver ETF assets hit meaningful milestones, signaling broader interest in precious metals.

In the U.S., silver hasn't yet matched gold's flow magnitude, but the relative acceleration is hard to ignore. iShares Silver Trust (SLV) drew $3.4 billion last year, while abrdn Physical Silver Shares ETF (SIVR) added $1.2 billion. That's not chump change, and it points to a wider diversification trend among commodity investors.

Get Market Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS (optional)

What This Means for Portfolio Construction

Equities and fixed income still dominated overall ETF demand in 2025, no question. But the pace of commodity inflows suggests something more deliberate is happening. Investors aren't just hedging anymore. They're actively tilting portfolios toward real assets and inflation anchors, building in exposures that go beyond fleeting safe-haven trades.

As we move through 2026, the big question is whether this commodity comeback broadens out. Will we see more action in industrial metals, energy-focused strategies, or multi-commodity baskets? Or will gold continue to eclipse everything else in the space? Either way, the message from 2025 is clear: commodities are back on investors' radar in a serious way.