$867M Bitcoin ETF Exodus: Panic Selling Or Smart Rotation?
Bitcoin ETFs experienced one of the biggest shock events of what they are currently suffering from recently, when some $867 million flowed out in one day, the second worst day since U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs opened in early 2024. The single greatest outflow was in February, when redemptions totaled roughly $1.1 billion. This sudden movement just as Bitcoin was dropping below the $100,000 mark, and finally came to a low point in the mid-$90,000 range, the lowest price bracket since early May 2025. The drop prompted a wave of questions about whether there was real capitulation for this time or that capital was simply redirected into new narratives or crypto.
The largest share of the outflows came from Grayscale’s Bitcoin Mini Trust, which alone underwent a sale of around $318 million in one session. BlackRock’s big IBIT Fund also registered significant outflows of about $257 million, even though it was the most successful and most widely used Bitcoin ETF on the market. Fidelity, Bitwise and other issuers saw strong redemptions too, suggesting that this isn’t just one product that has problems. Instead, was a reflection of a wider and more cautious movement among several institutions simultaneously. Now that Bitcoin was coming under the $100K psychological threshold, the derivatives market reaction was compounding tension. The break below the round number prompted stop-loss commands and forced liquidations.
Nearly $190 million worth of Bitcoin long positions were liquidated, over $300 million in liquidation in the overall crypto market in that same period. A lot of ETF desks are built on systematic risk models, and the swift turmoil led a large investor to cut their exposure to ETFs, deepening the outflows happening already. But while Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs were losing money, not all crypto products were suffering. Funds aligned with new narratives like the new U.S. Spot XRP ETF, which led to some $250 million in inflows, and newly introduced Solana ETFs, which also drew fresh capital to the blockchain attracted the same cash on the exact same day Bitcoin ETFs were sputtering.
That shows the move wasn’t an outright dismissal of crypto in general. Rather, it appeared to show more that investors were separating themselves from packed trades like Bitcoin and swapping into assets that offered new momentum. The macro environment compounded the stress in other ways. About then, a record-long shutdown of the U.S. government ended, and markets rapidly recalibrated expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts. Investors started pricing in a far lower likelihood of a December cut, meaning liquidity conditions were going to stay tight for longer. In tight-liquidity markets, institutions tend to lessen their exposure to high volatility assets and Bitcoin tops the list.