Bitcoin ETFs bleed $334M as IBIT leads seven straight days of outflows

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Spot Bitcoin ETFs hemorrhaged $334 million in net outflows on Tuesday, extending a streak that has now reached seven consecutive days of investor withdrawals. BlackRock’s IBIT, the largest spot Bitcoin ETF by assets, was the biggest contributor, with $192 million walking out the door.

That means IBIT alone accounted for more than half of the day’s total outflows. For a fund that spent much of its first year as the poster child of institutional Bitcoin adoption, seven straight days of bleeding is a notable shift in sentiment.

A whale in the room

Here’s the thing. The outflow streak is happening alongside a $1.3 billion IBIT whale trade, which complicates the narrative. Large block trades of that size can reflect hedging strategies, basis trades, or portfolio rebalancing rather than a straightforward bearish bet against Bitcoin.

In English: a single massive trade doesn’t necessarily mean someone is dumping Bitcoin. It could be an institution restructuring exposure across derivatives and spot markets simultaneously. But combined with sustained outflows across the broader ETF category, it adds a layer of uncertainty that’s hard to ignore.

What this means for investors

Seven days of consecutive outflows from spot Bitcoin ETFs is the kind of pattern that demands attention, not because any single day’s number is catastrophic, but because persistence matters more than magnitude in flow data.

When IBIT was pulling in billions during its early months, the inflow streak became its own narrative, a self-reinforcing signal that institutional money was arriving. The reverse dynamic works the same way. Sustained outflows can dampen price momentum and shift how market participants think about near-term demand.

The $1.3 billion whale trade is worth watching closely. If it turns out to be a basis trade, where an investor goes long the ETF and short Bitcoin futures to capture the spread, it would mean the outflows are less about directional conviction and more about mechanical arbitrage. That’s a very different signal than genuine institutional selling.

For now, the simplest read is that short-term appetite for spot Bitcoin ETF exposure has cooled. Whether that’s a blip or the beginning of a broader rotation depends largely on what Bitcoin’s price does next, and whether the whale trade unwinds quietly or loudly.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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