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U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) experienced net outflows totaling $127.12 million on Wednesday, despite a broad-based rally in both traditional finance and crypto markets. This development is unusual, as such rallies typically lead to bullish inflows into risk assets, including Bitcoin and crypto-related funds.
The outflows were primarily driven by BlackRock’s IBIT, which saw a significant $89.71 million exit, followed by Grayscale’s GBTC, which shed $33.8 million. Smaller issuers like VanEck and
also reported negative flows. Notably, Bitwise’s BITB was the only fund reporting positive inflows of $6.71 million.This marks the fifth consecutive day of negative flows for spot Bitcoin ETFs, raising critical questions about investor sentiment and the actual drivers of these funds in the current macro environment. The outflows suggest that short-term policy relief, such as President Donald Trump’s announcement of a 90-day pause on new tariffs and a reduction in reciprocal duties, is not enough to pull capital back into crypto funds. The policy also introduced a sharp escalation against China, with tariffs rising to 125%, signaling selective economic aggression.
While this spurred a record rally across equity markets, Bitcoin ETFs did not share the enthusiasm. This divergence suggests that macroeconomic clarity alone isn’t enough to pull capital back into crypto funds. The message from Spot Bitcoin ETF investors seems clear: short-term policy relief isn’t enough to override deeper concerns, possibly related to regulatory overhangs, profit-taking after earlier inflows, or a tactical shift away from ETF structures.
Grayscale’s GBTC has long been a key player in institutional Bitcoin exposure. Yet its consistent outflows hint at continued profit realization and potential fee-related migration to lower-cost ETFs like BlackRock’s IBIT. The current data shows GBTC alone contributing over 26% of the day’s net outflows, which might be skewing broader ETF sentiment. Even IBIT, which has generally attracted steady inflows, joined the red-flow trend this time. The market may be seeing structural ETF rotation rather than a rejection of Bitcoin altogether.
With
stock soaring and Strategy surging, the traditional equities associated with crypto rallied far more aggressively than Bitcoin itself. This implies a possible rotation from spot crypto products (like ETFs) into higher-beta crypto equities that offer amplified exposure during rallies. Investors may also be rebalancing portfolios to capture momentum in equity markets that have just been injected with new optimism thanks to Trump’s policy shift. With TradFi roaring back, crypto ETFs may have temporarily lost their shine in risk-adjusted terms.Although Spot Bitcoin ETF outflows are often interpreted as bearish, it’s important to consider the broader context. Bitcoin itself didn’t plunge in response—on the contrary, it remained relatively resilient alongside global markets. This suggests that underlying demand still exists, but it may be temporarily parked outside ETF wrappers. Looking ahead, if this market euphoria continues, and macro conditions stabilize or improve, ETF inflows could rebound swiftly, particularly if Bitcoin breaks through key resistance levels. Bitwise’s small but notable inflow hints at selective investor confidence returning.
In short, the current outflows could represent a healthy pause, not a trend reversal—especially in a climate where sentiment and capital allocation are extremely reactive to geopolitical and regulatory signals.

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