TL;DR
U.S. spot crypto ETFs returned from the Juneteenth break with another downbeat session on June 22, as Bitcoin and Ether products once again saw money leave the market. Combined withdrawals reached about $134.4 million, extending a weak stretch for both categories and reinforcing the cautious tone that has shaped the second half of June.
The latest session showed how uneven demand has become across issuers. Spot Bitcoin ETFs lost $68.3 million, driven almost entirely by sharp withdrawals from BlackRock’s IBIT and Grayscale’s GBTC. IBIT shed $172 million, and GBTC lost $81 million, overwhelming inflows into several competing products. Ark Invest and 21Shares’ ARKB added $64 million, Fidelity’s FBTC gained $57.4 million, and Grayscale’s lower‑fee BTC product attracted $48.1 million. Smaller inflows also appeared in MSBT, EZBC, and BTCW, while other funds recorded no net flow. The pattern underscored how sensitive the category becomes when its largest products turn negative. Bitcoin and Ether flows have been choppy throughout June, and the June 22 data followed earlier outflows of $90.7 million on June 18 and $82.2 million on June 17. Even with a modest $10.2 million inflow on June 16, the broader trend has leaned toward steady selling.

Ether ETFs mirrored the weakness, with $66.1 million in net outflows. Almost the entire withdrawal came from BlackRock’s ETHA, which lost $66.4 million. The only offset was a small $0.3 million inflow into 21Shares’ TETH, while all other Ether products remained flat. The concentration of selling in ETHA highlighted how dependent the category has become on a single issuer to balance daily flows. The uneven pattern has persisted throughout June, reflecting a less stable institutional appetite for ETH exposure. Bitcoin and Ether demand continue to diverge across issuers, fee structures, and liquidity profiles, making headline numbers more volatile and fund‑level data more important to track.
For crypto markets, the June 22 flows signal another cautious turn. Bitcoin and Ether ETFs both slipped back into outflows, and the largest funds in each category were the main drivers. Until IBIT and ETHA stabilize, Bitcoin and Ether sentiment inside regulated products is likely to remain choppy.