U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) extended their longest period of sustained investor withdrawals this year, underscoring weakening institutional appetite for digital assets as Bitcoin trades near multi-month lows.
The funds have recorded approximately $6.35 billion in cumulative net outflows over recent weeks, with $1.7 billion leaving the products during the latest week alone, according to market data compiled by Yellow and CoinGlass. On June 25, investors withdrew nearly $692 million, one of the largest single-day outflows of 2026, followed by another $445 million on June 26.
The selling pressure has coincided with Bitcoin’s decline toward $60,000, extending a correction of more than 50% from its October 2025 record high of about $126,300, according to market analysis published by CoinDesk. Total cryptocurrency market capitalization has also contracted sharply as investors shifted toward traditional safe-haven assets and high-growth artificial intelligence stocks.
BlackRock and Fidelity lead redemptions
The largest withdrawals have come from the industry’s biggest funds. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) and Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC) accounted for the majority of recent outflows, while Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) also continued to lose assets, according to data published by Farside Investors and CoinGlass.
Despite the recent withdrawals, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs continue to manage more than $100 billion in assets, making them the dominant institutional investment vehicle for digital assets. Since their launch in January 2024, the funds have attracted more than $50 billion in cumulative net inflows, although much of this year’s gains have been erased by recent selling, according to industry statistics compiled by NFT Plazas.
Macro risks drive investor positioning
Analysts attribute the retreat primarily to macroeconomic factors rather than crypto-specific developments. Expectations that major central banks will maintain higher interest rates for longer have reduced demand for speculative assets, while slowing ETF inflows have weakened one of Bitcoin’s strongest sources of institutional support.
Market participants will closely monitor upcoming ETF flow data for signs that institutional investors are returning to the market, as sustained inflows have historically coincided with renewed upward momentum in Bitcoin prices, according to weekly digital asset fund flow reports from CoinShares.
The post Bitcoin ETF outflows accelerate as institutional investors retreat appeared first on Crypto Reporter.


