Bitcoin (BTC-USD) ETF Outflows Top $1.34B as BlackRock’s IBIT Leads Exodus

Bitcoin (BTC-USD) ETF Outflows Top $1.34B as BlackRock’s IBIT Leads Exodus

After $1.34 billion in ETF redemptions concentrated in BlackRock’s IBIT, Bitcoin trades near $100,657 with whales reducing exposure and stablecoin inflows climbing to $7.3B | That's TradingNEWS

TradingNEWS Archive 11/4/2025 9:21:05 PM
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Bitcoin ETF Inflows Face $1.34 Billion Outflow Streak as Institutional Rotation and Macro Uncertainty Test Market Structure

The Bitcoin (BTC-USD) market has entered one of its most volatile phases of 2025, with spot ETFs registering four consecutive sessions of outflows totaling $1.34 billion, led by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT). After months of steady inflows that fueled Bitcoin’s surge above $120,000, investor rotation and macro tightening have flipped the narrative. Bitcoin now trades near $100,657, down 6.03% in 24 hours, struggling to hold above its $99,000 cost-basis support. The recent ETF exodus is not an isolated panic—it’s the intersection of liquidity stress, institutional repositioning, and profit-taking after one of the most intense bull phases in ETF history.

BlackRock’s IBIT Drives the Exodus While Other Issuers Hold Steady

ETF flow data from Farside Investors shows how sharply concentration defines this correction. Between October 29 and November 3, daily outflows reached $470.7 million, $488.4 million, $191.6 million, and $186.5 million, almost entirely driven by IBIT, while peers like Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) posted a modest $6.9 million inflow. The dispersion reveals that redemptions are issuer-specific rather than systemic—investors are not abandoning Bitcoin ETFs en masse but recalibrating exposure away from one dominant fund.
BlackRock’s IBIT, the world’s largest Bitcoin ETF, remains formidable with $98 billion in assets under management (AUM), despite the current retracement. In Australia, BlackRock (ASX: IBIT) prepares to list a local version with a 0.39% management fee, aiming to expand Bitcoin access to institutional investors under the ASX regulatory framework. The Australian ETF’s net asset value (NAV) stands at $60.56, down from a yearly range of $71.32 to $38.42, delivering a 16.74% year-to-date total return. The launch complements BlackRock’s broader ETF dominance—its iShares lineup surpassed $50 billion AUM in Australia and $5 trillion globally, reflecting institutional appetite for diversified exposure despite short-term volatility.

Liquidity Compression and Fed Dynamics Pressure Bitcoin ETFs

Macro tightening has played a crucial role in reversing ETF momentum. The Federal Reserve’s cautious tone following its latest 25-basis-point rate cut cooled investor enthusiasm, slashing December cut expectations from 91% to 67%. As liquidity expectations faded, portfolio managers trimmed risk, triggering mechanical redemptions across spot Bitcoin ETFs.
Simultaneously, the U.S. government shutdown and the freeze in Treasury General Account (TGA) spending—essentially the government’s checking account—have delayed liquidity injections that were expected to benefit risk assets. As Fundstrat’s Sean Farrell noted, “the extension of the shutdown stalls liquidity tailwinds that were meant to support Bitcoin into year-end.” Bitcoin’s price slid 17% from its early October high near $122,000, mirroring tightening conditions rather than structural weakness.

ETF Fatigue and the End of Automatic Absorption

For most of 2025, ETFs acted as Bitcoin’s “new supply absorbers,” consistently offsetting miner issuance and institutional selling. That mechanism has weakened. According to data from Capriole Investments, for the first time in seven months, institutional net purchases have fallen below daily mining supply, signaling that the once relentless inflow engine has entered a pause phase.
Charles Edwards of Capriole highlighted that “institutional accumulation has slowed to levels that no longer offset mining output,” a trend amplified by declining participation from corporate treasuries. MicroStrategy (now rebranded “Strategy”), which once led corporate Bitcoin accumulation, has slowed its purchases dramatically—adding just 43,000 BTC in Q3, its lowest quarterly addition of the year. With 674,000 BTC on its balance sheet, Strategy remains the largest single corporate holder globally, yet its reduced pace reflects the fading premium investors were once willing to pay for exposure. The company’s NAV premium dropped from 208% to 4%, narrowing its ability to issue stock to finance new Bitcoin purchases.

Corporate Treasury and ETF Behavior Converge

The corporate slowdown is not isolated. Japan’s Metaplanet, once hailed as Asia’s “MicroStrategy,” has seen its stock fall below the value of its Bitcoin holdings, prompting share buybacks and a restructuring plan to maintain its treasury model. Meanwhile, mergers like Strive Asset Management’s acquisition of Semler Scientific—together holding nearly 11,000 BTC—underscore consolidation within the corporate Bitcoin treasury space. These firms are not capitulating but adapting to tighter capital markets.
This same dynamic mirrors ETF behavior. Bitcoin ETFs have matured into true two-way markets, capable of deep liquidity but no longer one-directional. SoSoValue data shows that while the first half of October saw $6 billion in ETF inflows, the month ended with $2 billion in redemptions, demonstrating the evolution from “steady absorption” to “pulse inflows."

Market Impact: ETF Outflows and Price Structure Breakdown

The outflows have coincided with Bitcoin’s decisive break below $107,000, invalidating its near-term bullish structure. At $104,500, BTC-USD has fallen through its $107k cost-basis support, marking its weakest level since June. Technical pressure intensified as whales began transferring coins from cold wallets to exchanges. Data from Compass Point indicates that net sales from long-term holders exceeded 1 million BTC since June, signaling profit rotation rather than panic selling. Exchange balances, however, continue to decline—208,980 BTC have left exchanges in six months—suggesting that the broader supply remains in strong hands.
Volatility has surged in tandem: open interest in Bitcoin futures dropped 12% in 48 hours, while liquidations reached $191 million in one hour, primarily from overleveraged long positions. The RSI on daily charts plunged to 31, entering oversold territory for the first time since February, hinting at exhaustion among short-term sellers.

BlackRock’s Global ETF Strategy Expands Amid Outflows

While short-term outflows dominate headlines, BlackRock’s strategic expansion continues globally. Alongside IBIT’s Australian debut, the firm introduced the iShares Core Global Aggregate Bond (AUD Hedged) ETF (AGGG) to its fixed-income suite, targeting yield diversification for institutional portfolios. BlackRock’s total inflows across all iShares ETFs reached $153 billion in Q3 2025, including $41 billion in fixed-income ETFs and $53 billion in core equity ETFs.
The firm’s $205 billion in total quarterly inflows, 23% operating income growth, and 25% YoY revenue rise underscore resilience despite Bitcoin ETF volatility. With $5 trillion AUM in the ETF division and $164.7 billion market cap for IBIT, BlackRock’s position as the institutional gatekeeper for digital asset exposure remains unmatched.

Cross-Asset Rotation: Solana ETFs Gain as Bitcoin Sees Outflows

Interestingly, not all crypto ETFs are suffering. During the same week Bitcoin products recorded -$946 million in outflows, Solana ETFs saw +$421 million in inflows, their second-largest on record. This rotation suggests that capital is not leaving digital assets—it’s reallocating toward higher beta plays and staking-based yield products. Investors appear to be diversifying across ETF instruments rather than exiting crypto exposure altogether.
The divergence also reflects changing macro sentiment: Solana’s ETF yield of 7.3% APY appeals to income-seeking investors amid uncertainty, while Bitcoin’s narrative as “digital gold” temporarily softens as rate expectations adjust.

Macro Triggers and Whale Behavior: Who’s Selling and Who’s Buying?

While ETF outflows dominate institutional headlines, whale on-chain data tells a parallel story. Large holders have sold into strength since Bitcoin’s $122,000 high, rotating toward stablecoins. Binance’s stablecoin inflows hit $7.3 billion, the highest since December 2024, implying potential dry powder waiting to re-enter once volatility stabilizes. This contrasts with long-term holder de-risking, which often precedes a consolidation base rather than a breakdown.
Fundstrat estimates that if government spending resumes post-shutdown, Bitcoin could rebound toward $130,000–$150,000 before year-end. However, the current environment resembles “tactical de-risking” rather than structural abandonment.

ETF Flow Composition and Issuer Dispersion Matter More Than Totals

The key takeaway from ETF flow data is composition over magnitude. Multi-day outflow streaks can stem from a single issuer’s redemption cycle rather than market-wide liquidation. Because ETF data lags intraday reporting and bunches at settlement, streaks like the recent -$1.34 billion over four sessions may reflect timing asymmetries rather than sentiment collapse. Historically, when outflows are concentrated in one or two issuers but others remain stable, markets tend to stabilize within 5–10 sessions.

Technical Setup and Outlook for BTC-USD

Technically, Bitcoin’s structure remains fragile but not broken. Support at $95,000–$99,000 defines the accumulation base, with resistance near $107,000, $113,000, and $122,000. A decisive break below $95,000 could open room to $85,000, though on-chain liquidity clusters suggest strong buying interest above $98,000.
Momentum indicators favor a rebound if ETF flows stabilize. If inflows return to positive territory—particularly through BlackRock’s IBIT or Grayscale’s GBTC—Bitcoin could swiftly reclaim the $110,000–$115,000 zone.

Verdict: HOLD – ETF Outflows Reflect Rotation, Not Capitulation

Despite the largest four-day ETF outflow streak since the products’ inception, the broader data indicates a rotation, not an exit. Institutional conviction remains visible through global expansion of Bitcoin ETFs, corporate treasuries holding steady positions, and record stablecoin inflows waiting for reentry.
With ETF AUM still exceeding $100 billion globally, macro liquidity poised to improve post-government reopening, and on-chain supply remaining tight, the base case supports Bitcoin (BTC-USD) consolidating near $99,000–$104,000 before resuming its institutional-led uptrend. Near-term caution persists, but structurally, Bitcoin remains the most sought-after digital asset in the ETF ecosystem—a HOLD in data terms, awaiting the next wave of capital rotation.

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