Bitcoin nears $60,000 with record ETF outflows

Bitcoin has climbed back near $60,000, but spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded their largest weekly net outflows in more than a year. Institutions appear to be selling aggressively into the price levels that previously drew buying interest.

U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs saw $1.72 billion in net outflows last week. This marked the biggest single-week redemption in over a year and far exceeded the $318 million outflow recorded in early February when prices last approached $60,000. Outflows have now accelerated for four consecutive weeks. They rose from $1 billion in the week ended May 15 to $1.26 billion, then $1.42 billion, and finally $1.72 billion. The pattern stands in contrast to February. At that time, outflows slowed as prices fell toward $60,000, suggesting buyers were stepping in. Bitcoin traded near $62,000 as of the latest data.

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Illustration of Bitcoin ETF outflows showing a declining chart with money flowing out.
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Bitcoin ETFs record record nine-day outflow streak

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U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs have seen nine straight days of net outflows, the longest such streak since the funds launched in January 2024. Investors withdrew about $2.8 billion over the period, with $1.3 billion exiting this week alone.

US spot Bitcoin ETFs experienced their largest weekly outflow in five months, shedding $1 billion and ending a six-week streak of inflows. The reversal comes as hotter inflation data prompted investors to reassess risk exposure.

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Bitcoin spot ETFs saw nearly $1 billion in outflows over May 18-19 as Treasury yields rose and Federal Reserve rate-hike odds increased, ending a six-week inflow streak.

Rising US Treasury yields reached 5.18 percent on May 20, pressuring Bitcoin prices below $80,000. Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded net outflows of about 14,000 BTC in the latest week.

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Bitcoin climbed above $82,000 on May 6, driven by reports of easing tensions between the United States and Iran. Oil prices fell sharply as President Donald Trump paused a military operation in the Strait of Hormuz. The move triggered more than $200 million in short liquidations.

Bitcoin surged above $80,000 for the first time since January during early Asian trading on May 4, 2026, reaching highs around $80,600. The cryptocurrency later pulled back to around $79,000 following reports of an Iranian missile strike on a U.S. warship, which the U.S. denied. Geopolitical risks near the Strait of Hormuz overshadowed strong ETF inflows supporting the rally.

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Bitcoin dropped below 60000 on June 5 amid stronger than expected US jobs figures and ongoing capital shifts toward AI.

 

 

 

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