TL;DR
Bitcoin ETFs recorded their sharpest single-day retreat since mid-February, underscoring how institutional players are treating the latest price recovery as a chance to exit rather than accumulate. The $630.4 million net outflow on Wednesday, led by BlackRock’s IBIT with $284.7 million, highlights a decisive shift in sentiment.
Glassnode data shows the seven-day moving average for U.S. spot ETF flows has dropped to negative $88 million per day, the weakest reading since February. Unlike that earlier downturn, which coincided with outright price weakness, this wave is unfolding against a recovery. Analysts argue institutions are using the rebound as a liquidation window. Bitfinex noted corporate treasury purchases fell 80% from last month, narrowing institutional demand almost entirely to ETFs.
Ethereum ETFs mirrored the trend, shedding $36.3 million, while Solana ETFs stood out with $6 million in inflows. Bitcoin itself slipped below $80,000 after briefly touching $82,000 earlier in May, reinforcing the view that high interest rates are capping growth in non-yielding assets.

The macro backdrop is adding weight. Producer prices rose 6% in April, well above expectations, pushing rate-cut hopes further into late 2026. Treasury yields climbed to 4.42%, while futures priced a 40% chance of another hike. The Senate’s confirmation of Kevin Warsh as Fed chair has stirred debate over whether his stance will lean dovish or revert to hawkish roots. Analysts at Bitfinex argue elevated rates are directly limiting Bitcoin’s upside, framing the current move as part of a broader rotation into risk assets rather than a Bitcoin-specific rally.
Onchain signals show modest improvement. Realized profit and loss turned positive for the first time in three months, and long-term holders are distributing at a controlled pace of $180 million daily. Capital inflows have recovered to $2.8 billion per month, though still far below the $10 billion pace seen in past bull cycles. Support sits near $76,900, with resistance clustered around $86,900 as recent buyers approach breakeven.
Options markets are showing notable compression. Short-dated implied volatility has dropped to 30%, while realized volatility sits at 26%, both near annual lows. Block Scholes noted that, despite upcoming legislation debates, crypto options carry no event-risk premium. However, Coinbase’s COIN options do reflect heightened expectations.
Derivatives positioning points to potential turbulence. A concentrated negative gamma position of $2 billion at the $82,000 strike could amplify moves, while a $1.2 billion put cluster at $85,000 sets the stage for sharp swings. Analysts expect a volatile range between $82,000 and $85,200, with squeezes acting as temporary triggers rather than durable trends.