Five Key Takeaways from 2015 ETF Flows

(Bloomberg) — It’s time for the annual reading of the exchange-traded fund flow tea leaves.

ETFs took in a grand total of about $238 billion in 2015-just shy of their annual record of $243 billion set last year. No other investment vehicle came even close to this number. It is more than the flows into index funds, active mutual funds and hedge funds combined.

Here are five things from this years flows that we found most interesting.1. International ETFs Took in Nearly Half of All Flows

Like moths attracted to a porch light,ETFinvestors were drawn to accommodative central bank policies overseas as funds that invest outside the U.S. took in $108 billion-roughly double the inflows toETFs that invest in U.S. stocks. Put another way, international ETFs accounted for 45 percent of all net flows even though they make make up only 20percentof allETFassets.

About half of that money played the “central bank trade” in currency-hedged ETFs while the rest of it went inunhedged. In the end, the hedged rout was a better choice, albeit not by much. The Deutsche X-trackers MSCI EAFE Hedged EquityETF(DBEF), which took in $12.5 billion, was up 4 percent while the iShares MSCI EAFEETF(EFA), which saw inflows of$9.3 billion, was flat for the year.

A big question for 2016 is where investors will go should quantitative easing go out of style across the globe.2. SPY Saw Its Most Outflows Ever as Hot Money went Cold

The near-record breaking flow haul was especially impressive considering that the S&P 500 Trust (SPY) saw $32 billion in outflows-by far its worst year ever. This is the equivalent of the Cleveland Cavaliers making it to the NBA championship without LeBron James in the lineup. In fact, many of the super-liquid ETFs preferred by hot money investors also saw outflows including the iShares MSCI Emerging MarketsETF(EEM), the SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) and the iShares Russell 2000ETF(IWM), as shown in thebelow table of the top 10 biggest outflows.

Hot money tends to dart in and out of these ETFs based on the way they are performing. In a pretty meh year for the U.S. stock market (and a horrendous one in emerging markets and commodities) these formerETFstuds simply fell out of favor. That theETFindustry as a whole can attract billions of dollars of inflows when no asset class did all that well speaks to ETFs ability to continue siphoning away money away from mutual funds, single securities and derivatives as more investors switch over.3. Low-Cost and Smart-Beta ETFs Picked Up the Slack

With those erstwhileETFveterans out of the game, some new heroes stepped up, including the WisdomTree Europe Hedged Equity Fund (HEDJ) and the Deutsche X-trackers MSCI EAFE Hedged EquityETF(DBEF) which took in $13.9 billion and $12.5 billion respectively. In addition, the Vanguard S&P 500ETF(VOO)-both the youngest and cheapest of the S&P 500 Index ETFs-took in $13 billion as it continues to attract money rain or shine from buy- and-hold asset allocators.

These top flow-getters show that there are now two distinct and powerful evolutionary branches in theETFmarket. One branch is battlingthe fee war, where it hasbrought down the cost of investing to the point where investors can now get diversified core exposure using ETFs for a blended fee of less than .10 percent. This is the side of the tracks ruled by Vanguard Group Inc. and Charles Schwab Corp., which drew inover $90 billion in new cash combined.

The other evolutionary branch is racing towards the robotization of active management. This side could also be dubbed “gadgets” as these are speciallydesigned ETFs that give investorsa chance to outperform the market, such as smart-beta ETFs which tilt or screen the holdings based on factors such as volatility, size or momentum. Smart-beta ETFs took in about $60 billion. Also included here are ETFs that package a trade, such as currency-hedged ETFs, which go long a set of international stocks and short the currency. They alone took in about $50 billion.4. Leveraged ETFs Grew Twice as Fast as ETFs as a Whole

Speaking of gadgets, leveraged ETFs saw $6.3 billion ofnew money come in,ora 26 percent jump in assets from the beginning of the year compared with a 12 percent increase for ETFs as a whole. The reason for this outlier year in leveraged flows was the temptation to call a bottom in oil.

Investors spent about $20 billion in 2016 playing a rebound in oil-choosing leveraged products for a good chunk of that bet. In particular, the VelocityShares 3x Long Crude Oil ETN (UWTI) took in $2.4 billion, the highest amount of inflows aleveragedETFhas seenin six years. UWTI became a go-to for hot money looking to call a bottom in oil. Unfortunately for those “investors” it ended up losing 99 percent of its value on the year.5. iShares Upset Vanguard to Take in the Most Cash

A few years ago it was pretty widely accepted that Vanguard would dominateETFflows for years to come with their products that are at once, cheap, deep and increasingly liquid. But this year, BlackRock Inc.’s iShares-which makes both cheap ETFs and gadget ETFs-absolutely dominated the flow show, taking in $106 billion to Vanguards $76 billion. No one else was even close as seen in the chart below.

Boosting iShares inflows was the flood of money into international ETFs as they offer some of the most liquid international ETFs such as EFA and EZU. About a quarter of those flows came fromtheir core product line, which was launched a couple of years ago-effectively pulling a Vanguard on Vanguard by lowering their fees to near-nothing. Blackrock isshowing that you can fight battles-and win-on many fronts at once.