Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs record massive weekly outflows

Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) experienced $1.33 billion in net outflows during the week ending January 23, 2026, marking the second-largest weekly redemption on record. Ethereum ETFs followed with $611 million in withdrawals, led by BlackRock's products. This reversal came after strong inflows the previous week amid broader market pressures.

The cryptocurrency market faced significant selling pressure in the week ending January 23, 2026, as spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs saw substantial outflows. Bitcoin ETFs recorded $1.33 billion in net outflows, reversing the prior week's $1.42 billion inflows. This included four consecutive days of redemptions from January 20 to 23: $483.38 million on Monday, a peak of $708.71 million on Tuesday (January 21), $32.11 million on Wednesday, and $103.57 million on Thursday.

BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) contributed notably, with approximately $522.4 million in weekly outflows, including $356.6 million on January 21, $101.6 million on January 23, and $56.9 million on January 20, partially offset by a $15.1 million inflow earlier. Total net assets for Bitcoin ETFs dropped to $115.88 billion from $124.56 billion, with cumulative inflows falling to $56.49 billion from $57.82 billion.

Ethereum ETFs mirrored the trend, logging $611.17 million in outflows, upending the previous week's $479.04 million gains. BlackRock's iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) led with $432 million in redemptions, accounting for 71% of the total. Daily figures showed $229.95 million on January 20, $297.51 million on January 21, $41.98 million on January 22, and $41.74 million on January 23. Ethereum ETF net assets declined to $17.70 billion from $20.42 billion, with cumulative inflows at $12.30 billion down from $12.91 billion.

These outflows coincided with weakening market sentiment, as Bitcoin traded below $90,000 and Ethereum below $3,000. Institutional investors reduced exposure amid macro uncertainty and declining risk appetite, exacerbating a broader crypto downturn. While Solana ETFs saw $9.57 million in inflows, XRP ETFs recorded their first weekly outflow of $40.64 million.

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Worried traders on Wall Street watch Bitcoin crash to $66,000 on screens amid hawkish Fed minutes and market volatility.
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Bitcoin falls to $66,000 amid hawkish Fed minutes

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Bitcoin experienced volatility on February 18, 2026, trading in a tight range before dropping to around $66,000 in the U.S. afternoon following hawkish Federal Reserve minutes. Crypto-related stocks initially rebounded but later reversed gains, while liquidations neared $200 million. Geopolitical tensions and macroeconomic uncertainty contributed to the market's choppy performance.

Digital asset investment products saw $288 million in net outflows last week, marking the fifth consecutive week of losses. This brings cumulative outflows to $4 billion so far in the period. Trading volumes dropped to $17 billion, the lowest since July 2025.

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Spot ETFs for bitcoin and ethereum have experienced four consecutive months of outflows totaling over $9 billion since November, while XRP and solana ETFs continue to see inflows. This divergence suggests investors are rotating toward altcoins amid market pressures. Experts describe it as standard portfolio adjustments rather than a full retreat from cryptocurrencies.

Following a mid-week rally above $68,000, Bitcoin retreated toward $70,000 by early March 6, 2026, erasing $110 billion in market capitalization amid worsening Iran conflict, rising oil prices, and a strengthening U.S. dollar. The pullback occurs despite ongoing institutional adoption, with $2.6 billion in Bitcoin options set to expire, heightening volatility risks.

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Bitcoin approached $79,000 as markets eyed the highest weekly close since late January. Traders highlighted strong ETF inflows amid US-Iran tensions, though some warned of potential liquidity traps. The cryptocurrency recovered earlier weekly losses by Sunday.

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