TL;DR
Spot Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. have entered their sixth straight week of net outflows, extending the longest negative streak since launch. According to SoSoValue data, Bitcoin ETFs recorded $226.8 million in net outflows for the week ending June 18, bringing the six‑week total to $5.94 billion. Even so, analysts say the market’s tone is shifting, with the pace of withdrawals slowing sharply compared with early June.
Jeff Mei, COO of BTSE, said the rotation away from Bitcoin ETFs reflects a broader shift in investor attention. He pointed to the SpaceX IPO and the intense spotlight on the AI sector, noting that companies such as OpenAI and Anthropic have yet to go public. According to Mei, capital is being reallocated toward the hottest corner of the market rather than fleeing crypto outright.
The data support that view. Bitcoin ETFs saw $1.72 billion in outflows during the first week of June, a figure that has now dropped to just over $226 million. The weakening pace suggests that the selling pressure is no longer accelerating, even if the streak remains intact.

Jeff Ko, Chief Analyst at CoinEx, said the trend points to a market that is working through structural flows rather than a collapse in spot demand. He noted that a meaningful portion of Bitcoin ETFs outflows reflects rates, basis, and arbitrage unwinds. Long‑term allocators such as pension funds and endowments have remained steady throughout the downturn, reinforcing the idea that the selling wave is losing momentum.
Ko added that macro forces still dominate sentiment. Bitcoin has stabilized around $64,000 after U.S. and Iranian officials made encouraging progress in Switzerland. At the same time, new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh struck a hawkish tone last week, reiterating his commitment to bringing inflation back to 2%. Ko said crypto remains decoupled from equities and is likely to stay choppy until either Warsh signals a softer stance or a clear crypto‑specific catalyst emerges, such as progress on the Clarity Act.