On Wednesday, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a modest net inflow of $3.05 million, ending a 13‑session redemption streak that had withdrawn more than $4.4 billion from the group since mid‑May.
These outflows reduced total Bitcoin ETF assets to $80.40 billion, down from $104.29 billion at the streak’s outset.
BlackRock’s IBIT, the category’s largest fund, attracted $47.66 million, whereas Fidelity’s FBTC, Bitwise’s BITB and ARK’s ARKB continued to see outflows, according to SoSoValue data.
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs now hold 1.277 million BTC, as reported by CheckonChain, slightly above the February 23 low of 1.274 million BTC, which coincided with Bitcoin’s recovery from its February trough near $60,000.
Bitcoin ETF holdings peaked at 1.376 million BTC in October 2025, and have since fallen by roughly 99,000 BTC (about 7.2%) to the current level.
Spot Ether ETFs concluded a 17‑session streak, recording a net inflow of $19.30 million on the day, entirely contributed by BlackRock’s ETHA, while all other Ether ETFs posted zero net flow.
Total Ether ETF assets amount to $9.78 billion, representing 4.57% of ether’s circulating market capitalization, with cumulative inflows since the 2024 launch reaching $11.21 billion. The category remains roughly $2 billion below its earlier‑year peak.
Hyperliquid’s HYPE ETFs were the sole category untouched by the broader outflow, a status that persisted on Wednesday; the three‑fund complex added $12.15 million, with Bitwise’s BHYP drawing $7.45 million and Grayscale’s newly launched low‑fee HYPG fund capturing $4.70 million on its debut day.
HYPE ETF assets now total $185.68 million, accumulated over roughly four weeks since the May 12 launch, with each trading day in that period posting a net inflow.
The relative magnitude of Friday’s Bitcoin and Ether inflows compared with the size of the preceding outflows is noteworthy. A $3 million Bitcoin ETF inflow after $4.4 billion of redemptions reflects statistical noise rather than a regime shift, occurring on a day when Bitcoin traded near $63,629—well below the levels reached during the most intense outflow days in late May.
Bitcoin slipped to $62,715 in Asian trading, while Ether fell to $1,696, as broader risk sentiment weakened amid a miss on Broadcom’s outlook and a 4.7% sell‑off in the KOSPI.
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