Bitcoin ETFs see $562 million in inflows after a dark week
Bitcoin ETFs ended their slump on Monday. They pulled in $562 million in new cash. This snapped a streak of four days with heavy outflows. Can this spark change a crypto market still under strain?
Bitcoin pushes up a steep hill like a hero. It beats back the market drop. Cash and coins litter the ground around it. An orange glow hints at bounce-back and new hope.
Key points
Bitcoin ETFs drew $562 million Monday. That halted four straight days of outflows.
The cash helped cut last week's $1.5 billion pullouts.
Bitcoin trades 7.3% under the ETFs' average buy price of $84,000.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs show $1 billion in net outflows since 2026 began.

New cash flows back to Bitcoin ETFs after $1.5 billion exits
Big investors dipped a toe back in on Monday. Spot Bitcoin ETFs grabbed $562 million. This broke a four-day slide. The week before saw $1.5 billion flee the market.
Tensions hang thick. Bitcoin touched near $74,000 over the weekend. It then jumped past $78,000 on Monday. Such swings show raw nerves. Net flows stay red since January. Outflows hit $4.6 billion against $3.6 billion inflows. The gap leaves $1 billion drained.
Bitcoin ETF flows chart since January 16. Source: SoSoValue
Galaxy Digital watchers flag a key mark. Bitcoin sits 7.3% below ETFs' average cost, says Alex Thorn. That $84,000 line marks what most buyers paid.
Holders face red ink now. Last time this hit was summer 2024. Bitcoin dipped 9.9% under then rallied. Thorn calls this cost a short-term floor.
Ether ETFs keep sliding. Monday brought zero inflows. Instead, $2.9 million more flowed out.
Tough winds blow on despite the lift
Upside looks shaky with heavy hits. James Butterfill at CoinShares lists them: Bitcoin splits from global cash trends. Geopolitical fights rage. U.S. rate policy clouds up after Kevin Warsh takes Fed chair. Big money stays wary.
Data tells the tale. Crypto traded products shed $1.7 billion last week. That's twice the week before.
Outflows speed up in a "risk-off" dash. Folks dump high-risk bets. Gold dropped 4% after topping $5,300 per ounce.
BlackRock's IBIT tells the hard story. It's pitched as the top pick for big players. Now it posts average losses. Peak buyers from last October's rush feel the burn most. Bad timing stung them.
That $562 million bump helps little so far. Bitcoin ETFs face rough road ahead. Charts point to support near $56,000 realized price. That's a past low before the upswing. Will big trust return fast to make this stick?
Upvoted! Thank you for supporting witness @jswit.