The pain point has been most acute in the U.S., where major spot Bitcoin and Ethereum products accounted for the lion’s share of withdrawals, although European products showed some resilience with smaller inflows. Broadly, this trend reflects cooler appetite for crypto exposure amid market volatility and wider macro uncertainty. Saylor is buying, but ETFs are selling.
The average holder is in the red, Source: Bloomberg
Digital asset funds logged $1.7 billion in weekly outflows, flipping year-to-date flows negative, according to the latest CoinShares data — a blunt way of saying that more capital left crypto investment products than entered them for the first time this year.
For Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs, this isn’t just a short hiccup; the shift signals shifting positioning among institutional allocators who have grown more cautious. The outflow figures underscore how sensitive these products are to risk-off sentiment, especially when BTC and ETH prices are under pressure and broader markets aren’t providing clear direction.


