US-listed Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) attracted $197.4 million in net inflows for the week, breaking an eight-week stretch of continuous withdrawals. The inflow comes after Bitcoin rebounded from recent lows, but the amount represents only a small recovery compared to losses seen in previous weeks.
BlackRock dominates new inflows, while others see redemptions
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) led the weekly inflow, drawing in $291.9 million. BlackRock is a global investment management corporation recognized as one of the world’s largest asset managers.
While IBIT gathered significant capital, rival funds experienced outflows. Grayscale’s GBTC lost approximately $108.2 million, Fidelity’s FBTC faced redemptions of about $93.4 million, and ARK 21Shares’ ARKB saw weekly outflows near $15.3 million.
This mixed performance demonstrates that investors favored particular products, focusing their allocations rather than returning broadly to the category.
Since May 11, investors had pulled around $8.26 billion from US Bitcoin ETFs. The latest $197.4 million inflow recoups just 2.4% of these earlier withdrawals, signaling only a tentative return of institutional interest.
Despite BlackRock’s momentum, the broader group “recovered only about 2.4% of the $8.26 billion withdrawn during the previous eight weeks.” The discrepancy led analysts to urge caution before declaring a solid institutional comeback.
Daily flows highlighted the fragile recovery. The week started strongly with $265.7 million in net inflows, then slowed sharply to $21.5 million the following day. Combined outflows of $180.2 million were recorded across Wednesday and Thursday, while Friday’s $90.4 million inflow helped secure a positive weekly total.
| ETF Product | Weekly Net Flow |
|---|---|
| BlackRock IBIT | +$291.9 million |
| Grayscale GBTC | – $108.2 million |
| Fidelity FBTC | – $93.4 million |
| ARK 21Shares ARKB | – $15.3 million |
Ether funds follow similar trend
US-listed spot Ether ETFs mirrored the reversal seen in Bitcoin funds, recording $84.4 million in weekly inflows. This ended their own eight-week outflow streak, though these products had lost roughly $1.2 billion over the earlier period. Combined, Bitcoin and Ether spot ETFs attracted $281.8 million in new capital throughout the week.
Mini dictionary: Spot ETF, an exchange-traded fund that invests directly in the underlying cryptocurrency instead of using futures contracts or derivatives.
Muted volumes and upcoming US inflation report keep outlook in question
Weekly trading volumes in Bitcoin ETFs reached $84.1 billion, marking the lowest normal five-day total since October 2025. For Ether ETFs, turnover dropped to $20.5 billion, the weakest level since May 2025. Analysts point to these muted activity levels as signs that many investors remain cautious and are waiting for clearer direction before allocating new capital.
Despite this week’s inflows, Bitcoin ETFs are down roughly $5.34 billion for the year, while Ether funds have seen net outflows of about $1.35 billion in 2026. The price rebound in Bitcoin has yet to spark consistent ETF demand, as sizable midweek redemptions offset gains early in the week. Analysts noted that many portfolio managers remain selective, rather than shifting broadly to risk assets.
“Bitcoin ETFs may need several consecutive weeks of positive flows before a genuine institutional allocation trend is established,” several analysts observed as activity cooled through the week.
Seasonal factors could also weigh on the outlook, as August and September typically bring weaker trading conditions, and Bitcoin’s recent rallies have often faded by the end of the month.
A key development comes on July 14, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the June US Consumer Price Index (CPI) report. The result is expected to influence sentiment in both ETF flows and broader risk markets. Market participants are watching whether a softer inflation reading could boost risk-taking and prolong capital inflows, or if elevated inflation might drive renewed outflows from crypto ETFs.




