News linked to both this project and an event.
According to data from Trader T (@thepfund), Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded a net outflow of $64.84 million yesterday. Grayscale’s GBTC alone saw a single-day outflow of $124 million, dragging down overall performance; BlackRock’s IBIT posted the strongest inflow at $66.45 million, followed by Morgan Stanley’s MSBT ($9.35 million) and Grayscale’s Mini BTC ($10.6 million); Fidelity’s FBTC recorded an outflow of $8.69 million, VanEck’s HODL $6.13 million, Ark Invest’s ARKB $6.63 million, and Franklin Templeton’s EZBC $5.78 million.
According to SoSo Value data, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded net inflows of nearly $86 million last Friday, equivalent to approximately 1,350 BTC, with BlackRock's IBIT alone seeing net inflows of nearly $58 million. Standard Chartered's Head of Global Digital Assets Research, Geoffrey Kendrick, suggested that the recent ETF sell-off may be partly driven by some holders liquidating positions to free up cash for participation in SpaceX's IPO. Since October last year, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have accumulated net outflows of $7.6 billion, including $3 billion in the first six months of 2026. Strategy remains the world's largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, with over 800,000 BTC in its treasury. Michael Saylor resumed Bitcoin purchases in early June, following sales by Strategy at the end of May.
According to Trader T (@thepfund), yesterday’s Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded a net inflow of $30.27 million, ending an 18-day streak of consecutive net outflows. All inflows came from BlackRock’s $IBIT; all other ETFs registered zero inflows that day.
贝莱德 IBIT 和富达 FBTC 两只基金占据美国现货比特币 ETF 大部分新资金流入,市场呈现双寡头格局。
: Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas revealed that BlackRock has submitted the fourth and possibly final S-1 amendment for its Bitcoin Yield-Enhanced ETF, the "iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA)," disclosing for the first time a management fee of 0.65%, significantly higher than the spot Bitcoin ETF IBIT (0.25%).
According to data from Trader T (@thepfund), Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded a net inflow of $2.69 million yesterday, ending a 13-day streak of net outflows (totaling approximately $4.37 billion). BlackRock’s $IBIT saw a single-day inflow of $47.3 million, and Morgan Stanley’s $MSBT recorded an inflow of $9.87 million—making them the primary contributors. Meanwhile, ARK’s $ARKB experienced an outflow of $20.72 million, Bitwise’s $BITB an outflow of $15.57 million, and Invesco’s $BTCO an outflow of $12.65 million; all other products saw zero net fund flows.
According to data from Trader T (@thepfund), Bitcoin spot ETFs saw net outflows of $397 million yesterday, including $342 million out of BlackRock’s IBIT and $54.26 million out of Fidelity’s FBTC; all other products experienced no flows that day. This marks the 13th consecutive trading day of net outflows for Bitcoin spot ETFs, bringing the cumulative outflow to $4.37 billion.
According to Trader T (@thepfund), yesterday’s Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded a net outflow of $519 million, marking the 12th consecutive day of net outflows and bringing the cumulative outflow to approximately $3.97 billion (roughly 62,000 BTC). Among them, BlackRock’s IBIT saw a single-day outflow of $389 million; Grayscale’s GBTC recorded an outflow of $83.51 million; and Fidelity’s FBTC registered an outflow of $45.14 million. Morgan Stanley’s MSBT was the only ETF with net inflows on the day, recording $14.77 million in inflows.
According to data from Trader T (@thepfund), yesterday’s Ethereum spot ETFs recorded a net outflow of $90.14 million: BlackRock’s $ETHA saw an outflow of $44.27 million, Grayscale’s $ETH (mini) an outflow of $25.41 million, and Fidelity’s $FETH an outflow of $15.63 million; all other products experienced no fund flows. Meanwhile, BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF $IBIT recorded a net outflow of 6,164 BTC (approximately $440 million) on the same day—its 11th consecutive day of net outflows—with a single-day trading volume reaching $2.2 billion.
According to data from Trader T (@thepfund), Bitcoin spot ETFs saw a net outflow of $483.76 million yesterday—the largest single-day outflow in recent days. BlackRock’s IBIT accounted for $440.29 million of this outflow, representing over 90% of the total; Fidelity’s FBTC saw an outflow of $37.29 million; Ark’s ARKB recorded an outflow of $12.32 million; only Morgan Stanley’s MSBT posted a net inflow of $6.14 million, while all other funds reported zero net flow that day.
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have experienced net capital outflows for nine consecutive trading days, totaling approximately $2.84 billion. This marks the longest consecutive losing streak since the product's launch in 2024, surpassing the previous record set on February 8, 2025. BlackRock's IBIT was the primary source of these outflows.Analysts indicate that this round of capital outflows reflects a notable cooling in institutional demand for Bitcoin ETF exposure. Meanwhile, the market is showing signs of divergence: Hyperliquid-related ETFs and certain XRP spot ETFs continue to record capital inflows. In contrast, spot Ethereum ETFs have also faced capital outflows for 13 consecutive days, with cumulative outflows reaching approximately $694 million. This suggests that capital within crypto asset ETFs is undergoing a reallocation. (Cointelegraph)
Bloomberg Senior ETF Analyst Eric Balchunas posted on X platform, pointing out that Bitcoin's volatility and correlation are increasingly approaching the level of gold. This trend has been significantly underestimated during the current market adjustment and may be a positive signal amid recent market turbulence. Based on the 60-day historical volatility comparison data of IBIT and the gold ETF (GLD) since their launch, Bitcoin's volatility structure is gradually converging with gold, indicating that its asset characteristics may be changing.Eric Balchunas added that despite the volatile market environment, the BlackRock Bitcoin Spot ETF (IBIT) has continued to outperform U.S. stocks since the escalation of the Iran conflict and has achieved more than double the excess returns compared to the S&P 500 ETF (SPY) since the approval of BlackRock's ETFs.
According to Kairos Research data, Hyperliquid’s (HYPE) spot ETF absorbed 1.04% of its market capitalization within the first 10 trading days after launch—outperforming the debut performance of spot ETFs for Bitcoin (0.59%), Ethereum (0.41%), and Solana (0.31%) when measured by market-cap-adjusted demand. Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas noted that 21Shares’ HYPE ETF (THYP) has surged 50% since its launch two weeks ago—growing faster than BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF, IBIT.
Odaily An unknown trader sold approximately $1.3 billion worth of BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) on a dark pool on Tuesday, sparking market attention.Data shows the trader sold 29.2 million shares of IBIT at $43.16 per share around 14:30 UTC. Consequently, Bitcoin’s price dropped from $77,875 to $76,720 within 10 minutes, a decline of about 1.5%, before further dipping to around $75,600.Alex Thorn, Head of Research at Galaxy Digital, stated this is the largest IBIT dark pool trade he has ever seen. Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas noted that the trade size was 22 times larger than the second-largest IBIT sell order of the day.Additionally, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have experienced net outflows for eight consecutive trading days. On Tuesday alone, net outflows totaled approximately $333.6 million, with IBIT seeing outflows of about $192.4 million. Since May 14, cumulative net outflows from Bitcoin ETFs have exceeded $2 billion. Reports indicate that Jane Street reduced its Bitcoin ETF holdings by about 70% in the first quarter, while Goldman Sachs also trimmed its positions by approximately 10%. (Cointelegraph)
According to data from Trader T (@thepfund), yesterday’s Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded a net outflow of $100.81 million. BlackRock’s IBIT accounted for an outflow of $103.64 million—the largest outflow among all ETFs that day. Ark’s ARKB saw a net inflow of $2.83 million. Fidelity’s FBTC, Bitwise’s BITB, Morgan Stanley’s MSBT, Invesco’s BTCO, Franklin’s EZBC, Valkyrie’s BRRR, VanEck’s HODL, WisdomTree’s BTCW, Grayscale’s GBTC, and Grayscale’s Mini BTC all registered zero net flows for the day.
according to on-chain analyst Ai Yi's monitoring, Harvard Management Company first established a cryptocurrency position during the market rally in Q2 2025; in Q3, when BTC prices were near all-time highs, it significantly increased its holdings, boosting the number of shares by 257%, with IBIT once accounting for 20% of its portfolio, making it the largest public holding. In Q4, as the market declined, it reduced its BTC holdings while establishing an ETH position, only to clear all ETH after holding for just one quarter and exiting at a loss. Its BTC cost basis ranged from $107,000 to $114,000, while the ETH cost basis was $4,000. Over the year, it incurred losses exceeding $150 million in the crypto space.
According to data from Trader T (@thepfund), yesterday’s Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded a net outflow of $331 million, with BlackRock’s IBIT remaining the primary contributor—accounting for $326 million in outflows. Fidelity’s FBTC and Valkyrie’s BRRR saw outflows of $1.67 million and $3.79 million, respectively, while all other products experienced no fund movement.
According to data from Trader T (@thepfund), yesterday’s net outflow from Bitcoin spot ETFs totaled $649 million—the third-largest single-day outflow in 2026. Among them, BlackRock’s IBIT recorded the largest outflow at $448 million; ARKB (ARK Invest) saw an outflow of $110 million; Fidelity’s FBTC experienced an outflow of $63.42 million; Franklin’s EZBC recorded an outflow of $6.65 million; VanEck’s HODL saw an outflow of $7.59 million; Invesco’s BTCO had an outflow of $3.82 million; and Bitwise’s BITB posted an outflow of $9.16 million. Valkyrie’s, Grayscale’s, and Morgan Stanley’s products reported zero net inflows or outflows on the day.
Goldman Sachs’ Q1 2026 13F filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) shows a significant reduction in its holdings of crypto asset ETFs: it has fully exited all XRP-related ETFs and all Solana ETFs offered by Grayscale, Bitwise, and Fidelity. Its Bitcoin ETF holdings still include approximately $690 million in BlackRock’s IBIT and roughly $25 million in Fidelity’s FBTC—both down about 10% quarter-over-quarter. Ethereum ETF holdings declined more sharply: its position in the iShares Ethereum ETF (ETHA) was cut by approximately 70%, leaving about $114 million. Additionally, Goldman Sachs increased its stakes in Circle, Galaxy Digital, Coinbase, Robinhood, and PayPal during the same period, while reducing positions in Strategy and Riot Platforms.
Goldman Sachs significantly reduced its crypto ETF exposure in the first quarter of 2026 and has completely exited its holdings in XRP and Solana-related ETFs.Filings show that in the fourth quarter of 2025, Goldman Sachs held approximately $154 million in XRP-related ETFs, including products from Bitwise, Franklin Templeton, Grayscale, and 21Shares, making it one of the largest institutional holders of XRP ETFs at the time. Additionally, the firm previously held Solana-related ETFs such as the Grayscale Solana Trust ETF, Bitwise Solana Staking ETF, and Fidelity Solana Fund, all of which have now been fully sold off.However, Goldman Sachs still retains substantial holdings in BTC and ETH ETFs. Specifically, it holds approximately $690 million in BlackRock's IBIT and about $25 million in Fidelity's FBTC, though both positions were reduced by roughly 10% compared to the previous quarter. Meanwhile, its holding in BlackRock's ETHA shrank by about 70%, leaving approximately 7.2 million shares valued at around $114 million.Furthermore, Goldman Sachs increased its holdings in crypto-related stocks such as Circle, Galaxy Digital, Coinbase, Robinhood, and PayPal, while reducing positions in mining and infrastructure companies like Strategy, Bit Digital, Riot Platforms, and IREN. (Cointelegraph)