Economy
02-07-2026 14:25
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Crypto ETFs Lose $281 Million as Bitcoin Redemptions…

U.S. spot crypto exchange-traded funds recorded approximately $280.7 million in combined net outflows on Wednesday, July 1, as continued Bitcoin ETF redemptions outweighed modest inflows into Ether and Solana products.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs lost $296.0 million on the day, extending a late-June outflow streak into the first trading session of July. BlackRock’s IBIT led the withdrawals with $219.4 million in net outflows, while Fidelity’s FBTC lost $51.0 million, ARK 21Shares’ ARKB shed $39.9 million and Grayscale’s GBTC lost $62.8 million. Those redemptions were partly offset by inflows into several smaller or competing products. Invesco’s BTCO added $5.4 million, Franklin Templeton’s EZBC gained $3.5 million, VanEck’s HODL attracted $2.1 million, MSBT added $29.8 million and Grayscale’s BTC brought in $36.3 million. Bitwise’s BITB, Valkyrie’s BRRR and WisdomTree’s BTCW were flat.
Ether ETFs delivered a rare positive print, adding $14.8 million in net inflows. BlackRock’s ETHA attracted $36.6 million, while Grayscale’s ETH lost $18.5 million. ETHB lost $1.7 million and Fidelity’s FETH shed $1.6 million. Bitwise’s ETHW, TETH, ETHV, QETH, EZET and Grayscale’s ETHE were unchanged. Solana ETFs also finished slightly positive, adding $0.5 million. Bitwise’s BSOL brought in $4.0 million, while Grayscale’s GSOL lost $3.5 million and the remaining Solana products were flat.
Bitcoin ETFs Remain the Main Drag
The July 1 data showed that Bitcoin remained the weak point in the spot crypto ETF complex. Since June 23, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have now posted seven consecutive negative trading sessions, losing approximately $2.47 billion over that period. That run includes $113.8 million on June 23, $469.0 million on June 24, $691.7 million on June 25, $444.5 million on June 26, $231.0 million on June 29, $222.6 million on June 30 and $296.0 million on July 1.
The persistence of IBIT outflows is especially important. BlackRock’s fund has been the flagship product for institutional Bitcoin exposure and has often been viewed as the clearest signal of adviser and asset-manager demand. Large redemptions from IBIT therefore carry more market weight than isolated outflows from smaller products.
The flow pattern also suggests that rotation between funds is not enough to stabilize the category. Some products attracted capital on July 1, including MSBT and Grayscale’s lower-fee BTC product, but those inflows were overwhelmed by withdrawals from IBIT, FBTC, ARKB and GBTC.
Ether and Solana Show Limited Divergence
Ether’s $14.8 million inflow offered a modest contrast to Bitcoin’s weakness. ETHA’s $36.6 million inflow helped reverse part of the pressure seen in late June, when Ether ETFs posted repeated redemptions. However, the category remains fragile because inflows were concentrated in one fund while several others were flat or negative.
Solana’s $0.5 million inflow was too small to change the broader market picture. BSOL continued to show selective demand, but GSOL outflows reduced the net gain. The data suggests investors remain interested in higher-beta crypto exposure, but not at a scale large enough to offset Bitcoin-led selling.
The market impact is that regulated crypto funds are still acting as a headwind rather than a support mechanism. Earlier in the cycle, ETFs helped reinforce the institutional accumulation narrative. Late-June and early-July flows now show that the same products can transmit risk reduction quickly when investors cut exposure.
The next few sessions will be important for sentiment. If Bitcoin ETF outflows slow, July 1 could be treated as part of a final capitulation phase after a difficult month-end. If redemptions continue, ETF flows may remain a structural drag on Bitcoin prices and broader crypto risk appetite.