
The U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF market turned back to outflows after two consecutive days of attracting inflows, with a single-day net redemption of as much as $173.73 million—nearly wiping out most of the prior two days’ increase in capital. BlackRock’s IBIT led the outflows with $86.52 million. Fidelity’s FBTC followed closely, redeeming $78.64 million. Together, the two accounted for about 96% of total outflows.
(Source: SoSoValue)
The structure of these outflows is highly concentrated, with the main pressure coming from the two largest funds by market size. The combined $86.52 million outflow from IBIT and the $78.64 million outflow from FBTC totals more than $165 million, accounting for the vast majority of total outflows. Grayscale’s GBTC recorded a $13.26 million outflow, and Bitwise’s BITB recorded a $5.55 million outflow, creating additional selling pressure.
The only positive buffer came from Grayscale’s Bitcoin Mini Trust, which recorded a $10.25 million inflow, but its scale is far too small to offset the overall selling pressure. Total Bitcoin ETF trading volume for the day was $2.11 billion, and total net assets closed at $87.71 billion.
Ethereum ETFs today show more complex capital movements. Several funds recorded inflows at the same time, but the outflow from the largest fund fully dominated the overall result:
ETHA (BlackRock): outflow of $32.26 million, the largest single-day redemption in the Ethereum ETF market
FETH (Fidelity): outflow of $11.73 million
ETHE (Grayscale): inflow of $17.42 million (the largest single-day positive capital flow)
Ether Mini Trust (Grayscale): inflow of $6.49 million
ETHB (BlackRock): inflow of $5.49 million
ETHW (Bitwise): inflow of $4.28 million
TETH (21Shares): inflow of $3.20 million
This fragmentation indicates that capital is rotating from mainstream products from BlackRock and Fidelity to products such as those from Grayscale, rather than exiting the market entirely. Ethereum ETFs recorded a net outflow of $7.10 million, with total daily trading volume of $1.01 billion and net assets of $12.21 billion.
The XRP ETF recorded a net outflow of $1.32 million, all from the TOXR fund under 21Shares. Trading volume was $16.90 million, and net assets remained at $947.7 million, suggesting that the XRP ETF is still in a relatively subdued level of activity overall.
The Solana ETF, meanwhile, has recorded absolutely no trading activity for the second consecutive trading day. Net assets remain at $818.7 million. This “standstill” reflects the current level of institutional adoption for Solana ETF products—compared with the more mature ETF markets for Bitcoin and Ethereum, institutional adoption of Solana ETFs is still at a very early stage.
A single day’s capital outflow is not enough to confirm a broader trend of institutional withdrawal. This outflow is mainly concentrated in the two core funds, IBIT and FBTC, but total net assets for Bitcoin ETFs still remain at a high level of $87.71 billion. Analysts typically look at the direction of capital over consecutive weeks rather than a single day’s data to judge structural changes in institutional sentiment.
The outflows from ETHA and FETH combined with inflows into Grayscale-related products usually indicate that institutions are optimizing rotations among different ETF products, rather than a rejection of the Ethereum asset class itself. Such rotation may reflect differences in fees, liquidity preferences, or portfolio rebalancing considerations, and it needs to be assessed together with data over a longer time horizon to reach a more certain conclusion.
This cyclical pattern is a quantitative reflection of the current market’s uncertainty in sentiment. Macroeconomic geopolitical pressures (the Iran-U.S. conflict), uncertainty about the Fed’s policy path, and Bitcoin’s roughly 47% decline from its historical high together suppress institutions’ willingness to keep accumulating. This leaves the market in a tug-of-war state of “unable to confirm the bottom and unable to confirm a reversal,” making it difficult for a brief improvement in sentiment to translate into a sustained trend of capital entering the market.