Key Takeaways: US spot Bitcoin ETFs shed $6 billion in 30 days, the deepest capital exodus since the products launched in January 2024.
Key Takeaways: US spot Bitcoin ETFs shed $6 billion in 30 days, the deepest capital exodus since the products launched in January 2024.

Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded $6 billion in net outflows over 30 days, the worst stretch since the products debuted in January 2024, as the largest cryptocurrency fell 17%.
"The scale and duration of these redemptions reflect a broad-based reduction in risk appetite among institutional allocators," Eric Balchunas, Bloomberg Intelligence ETF analyst, said.
The 13-day consecutive outflow streak from May 15 through June 3 accounted for roughly $4.4 billion, or about 59,400 BTC withdrawn from the dozen-odd spot ETF products. BlackRock's IBIT and Fidelity's FBTC absorbed the heaviest redemptions, with peak daily outflows reaching hundreds of millions of dollars. The streak ended with a modest $3 million inflow around June 4-5, but weekly outflows remained elevated — one week alone saw $1.7 billion in net redemptions.
The $6 billion in outflows represents a single-digit percentage of the $50 billion to $60 billion in cumulative net inflows since launch, but the concentrated selling pressure pushed Bitcoin to four-month lows near $60,000 in early June. With the token now trading in the mid-$60,000 range, traders are watching whether the outflows stabilize or accelerate into a broader institutional retreat.
Three forces drove the sell-off
Profit-taking played a role: many institutional investors who entered positions in 2024 or early 2025 were sitting on substantial gains even after the decline. Macroeconomic uncertainty compounded the pressure, as sticky inflation data pushed fed funds futures to price out near-term rate cuts, reducing the appeal of risk assets. A general cooling of risk appetite across global markets accelerated the redemptions.
The outflows also weighed on the broader crypto market. Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap, fell in tandem with Bitcoin during the period, while the total crypto market capitalization declined by roughly 12% over the 30-day window, according to CoinGecko data.
What to watch next
The response of major ETF providers and any shift in US regulatory policy could influence the next phase. Bitcoin's ability to hold support near $60,000 will be critical — a break below that level could trigger a second wave of redemptions. Conversely, a stabilization in outflows and a return to net inflows would signal that institutional conviction remains intact despite the recent turbulence. The next major test comes with the release of US personal consumption expenditures data, which will shape rate expectations for the second half of 2026.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.