When spot Bitcoin ETFs first launched in the U.S. in January 2024, investors suddenly had over a dozen options to choose from. The arrival of major firms like BlackRock, Fidelity, Ark Invest, Bitwise, VanEck, and Franklin Templeton sparked expectations of stiff competition in the market. Eighteen months later, however, the landscape has consolidated, with two heavyweight funds emerging as the dominant players.
Inflows concentrate into two giants
Recent data highlights how institutional capital is flowing mostly into BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) and Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC). Smaller ETF products, in contrast, are having only a marginal effect on the overall market direction.
On January 14, total net inflows into spot Bitcoin ETFs hit $840.6 million. Of this, IBIT attracted $648.4 million, while FBTC took in $125.4 million—meaning over 90% of that day’s new investments were captured by just these two ETFs.
A similar pattern appeared on April 17, when daily net inflows reached $663.9 million. IBIT brought in $284 million that day, with FBTC following at $163.4 million. Combined, the pair accounted for roughly two thirds of all incoming funds in the sector.
| Date | Total Net Inflow | IBIT | FBTC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 14 | $840.6 million | $648.4 million | $125.4 million |
| Apr 17 | $663.9 million | $284 million | $163.4 million |
| May 1 | $629.8 million | $284.4 million | $213.4 million |
On May 1, total net inflows reached $629.8 million, with IBIT securing $284.4 million and FBTC $213.4 million—together drawing in nearly $500 million. This trend has remained consistent throughout most of 2026, with these two funds dominating inflows on high-allocation days.
The data shows investor interest in Bitcoin ETFs is increasingly focused on the largest and most liquid products.
Scale becomes crucial in a weak market
This concentration has become more pronounced during a challenging period for both Bitcoin and the broader crypto ETF market. Since the beginning of the year, Bitcoin has lost about 29% of its value. This fall has tested institutional sentiment and led to several rounds of net outflows on the ETF side.
Between mid-May and early June, there were several days of significant withdrawals from spot Bitcoin ETFs. In prior downturns, such drops were often seen as buying opportunities, but the most recent figures suggest investors are now adopting a more cautious stance.
Despite this, IBIT has positioned itself as the sector’s flagship product, logging the highest inflows on most days and acting as a stabilizing force when market stress rises. Even on days when the broader ETF basket experienced sharp outflows, IBIT either held steady or saw less severe declines compared to its peers.
Smaller issuers lose ground
This market split also reflects the priorities of large institutional investors. For financial advisors, registered investment advisors, hedge funds, family offices, and pension consultants, liquidity, trading volume, and issuer reputation weigh as much as direct Bitcoin exposure when choosing products.
BlackRock currently manages over $10 trillion in assets worldwide, while Fidelity operates one of the largest retirement and brokerage networks in the United States. The distribution reach and brand power of these two giants have made their funds the default choice for a vast majority of investors.
Meanwhile, funds from Franklin Templeton (EZBC), VanEck (HODL), Valkyrie (BRRR), and WisdomTree (BTCW) typically see only single-digit millions of dollars in daily flows, giving them relatively little sway over the broader market’s direction.
Instead of broad issuer competition, a market structure is emerging where scale, liquidity, and distribution power determine investor choices and concentrate the largest share with just a few winners.
Bitwise’s BITB fund and Ark’s ARKB, once considered top contenders, now trail behind the two market leaders. Additionally, Trump Media & Technology Group abandoned its plans for a spot Bitcoin ETF earlier this year, suggesting that as the market grows crowded, competition is getting tougher, with dominance increasingly centralizing around the main providers.



