The post Bitcoin, ETFs, and the ‘dual strategy’ analysts are talking about today appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin [BTC] has spent the past year being pulled in two directions. One is Wall Street’s neatly packaged ETFs, the other is back to its roots of “not your keys, not your coins.” And instead of choosing a side, the crowd is choosing to embrace both. In 2025, the real Bitcoin strategy isn’t maximalist or institutional. It’s a split personality that finally makes sense. ETFs vs. self-custody ETFs have become the most convenient doorway into Bitcoin for a growing class of investors who want exposure without the hassles of private keys. Institutional access, deep liquidity, and integration with retirement accounts have turned them into the default entry point. Source: SoSoValue And the numbers back that up. Across 2024 and most of 2025, monthly spot Bitcoin ETF flows were overwhelmingly positive, with multiple months posting $4B to $6B inflows. This is especially during late 2024 and mid-2025. Even total net assets climbed steadily toward the $140B range by July 2025, so institutional allocations are aggressive. ETF analyst Eric Balchunas seems to agree, saying in an X post, “What I don’t understand is why the snobby OG’s were totally fine with crypto exchanges holding your bitcoin and not ETFs? It’s the same outsourced custody concept, except ETFs are waaay cheaper and safer.” For many new investors, that clarity is important. Bitcoin held in an ETF feels familiar and regulated. And that, packaged for the TradFi world, seems to be exactly what a large part of the market wants. However, for long-time Bitcoin users, the appeal has always been sovereignty. That’s why self-custody remains non-negotiable for many OGs, even as ETFs gain mainstream momentum. As Sam Wouters, Director of Marketing at River, put it, “On an exchange you can withdraw to self-custody at any time, that’s not the case with an ETF.” That… The post Bitcoin, ETFs, and the ‘dual strategy’ analysts are talking about today appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin [BTC] has spent the past year being pulled in two directions. One is Wall Street’s neatly packaged ETFs, the other is back to its roots of “not your keys, not your coins.” And instead of choosing a side, the crowd is choosing to embrace both. In 2025, the real Bitcoin strategy isn’t maximalist or institutional. It’s a split personality that finally makes sense. ETFs vs. self-custody ETFs have become the most convenient doorway into Bitcoin for a growing class of investors who want exposure without the hassles of private keys. Institutional access, deep liquidity, and integration with retirement accounts have turned them into the default entry point. Source: SoSoValue And the numbers back that up. Across 2024 and most of 2025, monthly spot Bitcoin ETF flows were overwhelmingly positive, with multiple months posting $4B to $6B inflows. This is especially during late 2024 and mid-2025. Even total net assets climbed steadily toward the $140B range by July 2025, so institutional allocations are aggressive. ETF analyst Eric Balchunas seems to agree, saying in an X post, “What I don’t understand is why the snobby OG’s were totally fine with crypto exchanges holding your bitcoin and not ETFs? It’s the same outsourced custody concept, except ETFs are waaay cheaper and safer.” For many new investors, that clarity is important. Bitcoin held in an ETF feels familiar and regulated. And that, packaged for the TradFi world, seems to be exactly what a large part of the market wants. However, for long-time Bitcoin users, the appeal has always been sovereignty. That’s why self-custody remains non-negotiable for many OGs, even as ETFs gain mainstream momentum. As Sam Wouters, Director of Marketing at River, put it, “On an exchange you can withdraw to self-custody at any time, that’s not the case with an ETF.” That…

Bitcoin, ETFs, and the ‘dual strategy’ analysts are talking about today

2025/12/09 11:13

Bitcoin [BTC] has spent the past year being pulled in two directions. One is Wall Street’s neatly packaged ETFs, the other is back to its roots of “not your keys, not your coins.”

And instead of choosing a side, the crowd is choosing to embrace both.

In 2025, the real Bitcoin strategy isn’t maximalist or institutional. It’s a split personality that finally makes sense.

ETFs vs. self-custody

ETFs have become the most convenient doorway into Bitcoin for a growing class of investors who want exposure without the hassles of private keys.

Institutional access, deep liquidity, and integration with retirement accounts have turned them into the default entry point.

Source: SoSoValue

And the numbers back that up.

Across 2024 and most of 2025, monthly spot Bitcoin ETF flows were overwhelmingly positive, with multiple months posting $4B to $6B inflows. This is especially during late 2024 and mid-2025.

Even total net assets climbed steadily toward the $140B range by July 2025, so institutional allocations are aggressive.

ETF analyst Eric Balchunas seems to agree, saying in an X post,

For many new investors, that clarity is important. Bitcoin held in an ETF feels familiar and regulated. And that, packaged for the TradFi world, seems to be exactly what a large part of the market wants.

However, for long-time Bitcoin users, the appeal has always been sovereignty. That’s why self-custody remains non-negotiable for many OGs, even as ETFs gain mainstream momentum.

As Sam Wouters, Director of Marketing at River, put it,

That freedom of movement is the core of this side of the argument. To them, “snobby OGs love bitcoin as money that creates freedom.”

To them, an ETF is a bird in a cage.

The new middle ground

The custody debate ultimately comes down to one thing: control.

Early Bitcoiners tolerated keeping coins on exchanges because, at any moment, they could pull them out and return to full sovereignty. ETFs don’t offer that. They package Bitcoin but lock away the ability to ever touch it.

That’s why a new dual-strategy is emerging. As Bitcoin maxi Fred Krueger puts it,

Investors today use ETFs for ease and cold wallets for principle. This is a balance that proves that Bitcoin is maturing.

AMBCrypto previously reported that 2025 has already logged 171 negative Bitcoin days, potentially pushing the market into a sideways pattern.

With corporate treasuries now holding over 1 million BTC (more than major exchanges, mind you), this growing base is starting to act as a new structural floor for the asset.

ETFs are a structural part of the Bitcoin market

They add liquidity and give institutions a regulated path to participate without operational complexity. At the same time, self-custody continues to protect Bitcoin’s core promise.

That is open access, user control, and the ability to move value without permission.

These two tracks aren’t competing… as much as they are stabilizing each other.

The balance is helping create a more durable ecosystem. ETF demand brings predictable inflows, while self-custody makes sure that Bitcoin doesn’t drift too far from its original design.

Miners, custodians, exchanges, and asset managers now operate in a shared loop rather than on opposing sides.

The resulting offer is a clearer identity for Bitcoin going forward. BTC will be an asset that can live comfortably inside traditional finance without losing the option to exist outside it.

If anything, the dual structure makes this a market that is growing more flexible, more accessible, and more capable of supporting the next wave of users.

The fact that it comes with no purity tests required, is a huge plus.


Final Thoughts

  • Bitcoin’s future is a place where ETFs and self-custody reinforce each other.
  • With 171 red days and over 1 million BTC held by corporations, the market is stabilizing even with its changing identity.
Next: Bitcoin price enters ‘controlled volatility’ phase – What this means for $90K

Source: https://ambcrypto.com/bitcoin-etfs-and-the-dual-strategy-analysts-are-talking-about-today/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

“Bitcoin After Dark” ETF targets gains while the world sleeps

“Bitcoin After Dark” ETF targets gains while the world sleeps

The post “Bitcoin After Dark” ETF targets gains while the world sleeps appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. A proposed exchange-traded fund is built to chase Bitcoin’s price action while the U.S. market is shut on Wall Street. The product is named the Nicholas Bitcoin and Treasuries AfterDark ETF, according to a filing dated December 9 was sent to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The fund opens Bitcoin-linked trades “after the U.S. financial markets close” and exits those positions “shortly after the next day’s open.” Trading is locked into the overnight window, and of course the fund will not hold Bitcoin directly. At least 80% of assets would be used on Bitcoin futures, exchange-traded products, other Bitcoin ETFs, and options tied to those ETFs and ETPs. The rest can sit in Treasuries. The filing said that the goal is to use price action that forms when the equity market is offline. Exposure stays inside listed products only. No spot tokens, no on-chain custody, and all positions reset each morning after the open. After-hours trading drives ETF flows Bespoke Investment Group tracked a test using the iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT), and reported that “buying at the U.S. market close and selling at the next open since January 2024 produced a 222% gain.” The same test flipped to daytime only showed “a 40.5% loss from buying at the open and selling at the close.” That gap is the return spread the AfterDark ETF is built to target. Source: Bespoke Bitcoin last traded at $92,320, down nearly 1% on the day, down about 12% over the past month, and little changed since the start of the year. ETF filings across crypto keep expanding. Products tied to Aptos, Sui, Bonk, and Dogecoin are now in the pipeline. The pace picked up after President Donald Trump pushed for softer rules at the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. After that push,…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/11 07:46
‘One Battle After Another’ Becomes One Of This Decade’s Best-Reviewed Movies

‘One Battle After Another’ Becomes One Of This Decade’s Best-Reviewed Movies

The post ‘One Battle After Another’ Becomes One Of This Decade’s Best-Reviewed Movies appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Topline Critics have hailed Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” starring Leonardo DiCaprio, as a “masterpiece,” indicating potential Academy Awards success as it boasts near-perfect scores on review aggregators Metacritic and Rotten Tomatoes based on early reviews. Leonardo DiCaprio stars in “One Battle After Another,” which opens in theaters next week. (Photo by Jeff Spicer/Getty Images for Warner Bros. Pictures) Getty Images for Warner Bros. Pictures Key Facts “One Battle After Another” boasts a nearly perfect 97 out of a possible 100 on Metacritic based on its first 31 reviews, making it the highest-rated movie of this decade on Metacritic’s best movies of all time list. The movie also has a 96% score on Rotten Tomatoes based on the first 56 reviews, with only two reviews considered “rotten,” or negative. The Associated Press hailed the movie as “an American masterpiece,” noting the movie touches on topical political themes and depicts a society where “gun violence, white power and immigrant deportations recur in an ongoing dance, both farcical and tragic.” The movie stars DiCaprio as an ex-revolutionary who reunites with former accomplices to rescue his 16-year-old daughter when she goes missing, and Anderson has said the movie was inspired by the 1990 novel, “Vineland.” Most critics have described the movie as an action thriller with notable chase scenes, which jumps in time from DiCaprio’s character’s early days with fictional revolutionary group, the French 75, to about 15 years later, when he is pursued by foe and military leader Captain Steven Lockjaw, played by Sean Penn. The Warner Bros.-produced film was made on a big budget, estimated to be between $130 million and $175 million, and co-stars Penn, Benicio del Toro, Regina Hall and Teyana Taylor. When Will ‘one Battle After Another’ Open In Theaters And Streaming? The move opens in…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 07:35