Bitcoin ETFs Shed $1.62 Billion in Four Days — Are Hedge Funds Pulling Back?
Bitcoin spot ETFs have seen heavy outflows over the past four trading days, losing a total of $1.62 billion, raising questions about whether hedge funds are dialing back their exposure as market conditions shift.
The withdrawals come amid weak price momentum for Bitcoin, which has struggled to hold critical levels below $90,000. A once-popular institutional arbitrage strategy—buying spot Bitcoin via ETFs while shorting futures—has also lost appeal as yields from these trades compress.
BlackRock Leads Outflows
On January 22, US-listed Bitcoin ETFs saw net outflows of $32.11 million, following $708.71 million on January 21 and $483.38 million on January 20, according to Sosovalue data. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) led the pack, with $22.35 million redeemed—roughly 250 BTC. Despite this, IBIT remains the largest Bitcoin ETF, holding $69.84 billion in assets.
Other major ETFs also saw outflows. Fidelity’s FBTC lost $9.76 million, while Grayscale’s GBTC remained largely flat day-to-day but is still deeply negative overall, with $25.58 billion in cumulative net outflows. Other issuers—including Bitwise, VanEck, and Ark—saw mostly stable flows, suggesting a pause rather than panic selling.
Price Pressure and Market Conditions
Bitcoin traded around $89,982 on January 22, down 1.3% for the day and nearly 5% over the week, with trading volumes falling roughly 28% to $37.77 billion. This suggests that overall market participation is thinning as BTC consolidates below $90,000.
Hedge Funds Exit as Yields Compress
Analysts point to hedge fund activity as a major driver. Yields on the Bitcoin basis trade—buying spot via ETFs and selling futures—have dropped below 5%, down from 17% a year ago. With returns now comparable to short-term US Treasuries, capital has less incentive to stay deployed.
Even though hedge funds may represent only 10–20% of ETF holders, their activity can dominate short-term flows when the strategy stops working. Bitcoin futures open interest on the CME has fallen below Binance for the first time since 2023, showing reduced institutional participation in cash-and-carry trades.
Crypto market indicators also reflect this shift. Whale and dolphin wallets have moved from accumulation to distribution, and the Coinbase premium remains deeply negative, signaling weaker appetite from US institutions.
Not All Crypto ETFs Are Selling
It’s not a blanket exit from crypto, though. Ethereum spot ETFs also saw outflows this week, including $41.98 million on January 22, but XRP and Solana-linked products experienced modest inflows, suggesting selective repositioning rather than wholesale liquidation.
With leverage in Bitcoin futures climbing to its highest level since November, the market is increasingly sensitive to sharp moves, making the coming weeks critical for institutional strategies and ETF flows.



