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US spot Bitcoin ETFs extend outflow streak

U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) posted a sixth consecutive day of outflows on Friday, pulling total 2026 net inflows down to $536 million as withdrawals since May 14 reached $1.55 billion.

Data from Friday showed $105.2 million exiting the products, led by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust with $68.9 million in redemptions and Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund with $36.3 million in outflows. No other U.S. Bitcoin ETF reported flow changes on the day.

Longest withdrawal streak of 2026

The six-day run is the longest stretch of net outflows for U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs so far this year. If withdrawals continue at the current pace, cumulative 2026 flows could turn negative in the coming weeks.

While the market remains in positive territory overall, the picture is concentrated. Of the $536 million net inflows this year, $2.7 billion have come from BlackRock’s fund alone, underscoring its outsized role in supporting the complex. That figure is still far below its 2025 intake of $25 billion, pointing to slower new capital entering Bitcoin ETFs in 2026.

Institutional exposure moves lower

Public filings show major trading firms have been cutting exposure to Bitcoin ETFs. Jane Street reduced its holdings by about 70% in the first quarter, while Goldman Sachs cut its positions by around 10%.

These reductions suggest a deliberate de-risking among large institutions following recent price volatility. Allocations built during more bullish conditions are being reassessed, and some exposure is being scaled back rather than expanded.

Ether and altcoin ETFs struggle to attract capital

Weak flows are not limited to Bitcoin. Ether-based spot ETFs have recorded net outflows in 2026, and newer altcoin funds have not attracted comparable interest.

Across crypto products, ETF flow data remains a key gauge of institutional presence and trading behavior, with sustained redemptions in both Bitcoin and Ether products signaling a broader cooling toward digital assets.

For the week ending May 22, spot Ethereum ETFs saw net outflows of $216 million, adding to concerns that appetite for higher-risk crypto exposure is fading.

Low-fee products gain ground

Despite redemptions from the largest, older funds, some newer products continue to gather assets, highlighting a shift toward cost efficiency.

Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin Trust ETF, which launched on April 8, has already attracted $264 million in inflows. That puts it ahead of Bitcoin ETFs from Invesco and WisdomTree, both of which debuted in 2024. The Morgan Stanley product carries a 0.14% management fee, among the lowest in the market.

Analysts say the divergence between outflows from higher-cost, established funds and inflows into aggressively priced newcomers shows that a portion of capital is rotating rather than exiting the asset class entirely. Traders appear more focused on fee structures and product efficiency as they rebalance exposure.

Truth Social-linked ETF plan withdrawn

Prospects for a Truth Social-backed Bitcoin ETF faded this week after Yorkville America asked regulators to withdraw several cryptocurrency filings.

Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart linked the decision to intense competition and fee compression across the Bitcoin ETF segment, noting that the low-cost Morgan Stanley product has raised the bar for pricing.

Market enters cautious phase

The combination of sustained outflows from leading spot Bitcoin ETFs and reduced holdings by prominent quantitative firms indicates a clear shift from the early, high-velocity adoption phase to a more cautious, evaluative stance among large market participants.

The current pattern suggests two concurrent trends:

  • a pullback in risk as some capital leaves crypto ETFs altogether
  • an internal rotation as remaining capital moves toward cheaper, more efficient products

This dynamic reframes the situation from pure capital flight to a period of portfolio optimization and risk management.

Data to watch: daily flows and 13f filings

Market participants are closely watching daily ETF flow numbers as a high-frequency indicator of institutional sentiment. The key question is whether the recent withdrawals mark a short-term consolidation after heavy 2025 inflows, or the start of a more extended bearish phase for listed crypto products.

Attention is also turning to the next round of quarterly 13F filings, which will show how large institutions adjusted positions after the first quarter. Those disclosures will help determine whether the cuts by firms such as Jane Street were idiosyncratic or part of a broader move among professional money managers to reduce or reallocate crypto exposure.

The performance of low-fee, recently launched funds over the coming months may determine whether the sector is experiencing a structural rotation within crypto ETFs or facing a more widespread retreat from digital-asset risk.


Worried about ETF outflows? Learn how macro shifts really move crypto in this detailed market impact guide.

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