
According to data platform SoSoValue, U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs experienced a net outflow of $6.39 billion over the past four months, marking the longest monthly loss since these funds launched in January 2024. During the same period, Ethereum ETFs saw an outflow of $2.76 billion, with total capital outflows exceeding $9 billion, confirming a significant collapse in institutional demand for digital assets.
The four consecutive months of outflows from Bitcoin ETFs is the longest loss period since their launch in January 2024. In the months following 2024 and after Trump’s victory in the U.S. presidential election, investors flooded into these assets, fueling a strong bull market for both tokens. However, the rapid demand collapse this time also indicates that institutional sentiment reversed almost overnight.
Capital outflows concentrated sharply after early October 2025 (rumored to be due to pricing inefficiencies at offshore exchange Binance), with institutional sentiment continuing to deteriorate. Ethereum ETFs face an even more severe situation; since peaking above $4,950 in August 2025, Ethereum has fallen over 60%, with institutional withdrawals and spot price declines reinforcing each other in a vicious cycle.
Spot ETFs, launched in early 2024, once served as a clear indicator of institutional demand. Daily net inflow data was seen as a barometer of institutional confidence. Now, four consecutive months of outflows force the market to reassess long-term institutional commitment to crypto assets.
The complexity of the current situation is heightened by new variables from the Middle East conflict. Due to escalated U.S.-Iran military actions, Bitcoin fell to about $66,700 on Monday, crude oil surged to $77 per barrel, and Asian stock markets declined by 1.4%. Rising energy prices increase inflation fears, potentially delaying Federal Reserve rate cuts further, exerting ongoing pressure on risk assets including Bitcoin.
Analysts note that any meaningful market rebound requires continuous inflows into Bitcoin ETFs, not sporadic small inflows. If oil supply remains stable, some crypto traders believe downside risks may be limited, but the overall environment still does not favor a quick bullish recovery.
This is the longest consecutive monthly loss period (four months) since the launch of U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs in January 2024. The scale and duration of capital outflows confirm that short-term institutional demand for Bitcoin has significantly cooled, directly related to Bitcoin’s nearly 50% decline from its high.
Ethereum ETFs experienced a $2.76 billion outflow over four months, and Ethereum’s spot price has fallen over 60% from its August 2025 high. The mutual reinforcement of institutional withdrawals and price declines indicates a more pronounced market risk aversion, with less liquid assets like Ethereum being sold off more aggressively.
Analysts emphasize that a meaningful market rebound requires sustained inflows into Bitcoin ETFs. The current macro environment—rising oil prices fueling inflation fears and delayed Fed rate cuts—is still unfavorable. However, if geopolitical tensions ease and lead to a dovish shift by the Fed, institutional capital could return faster than expected.
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