Key Points
- Spot Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. experienced significant outflows on Feb. 19 due to regulatory delays and ongoing geopolitical issues.
- Ethereum ETFs, on the other hand, saw increased inflows.
Bitcoin ETFs in the United States observed a significant net outflow on February 19.
The market’s consolidation phase was maintained due to Bitcoin’s struggle amid delays in cryptocurrency regulations and ongoing geopolitical tensions, such as the tariff disputes between the U.S. and China.
Data on Bitcoin ETFs
SoSoValue data reveals that the 12 spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $71.07 million in outflows on the said day, extending their outflow streak to two consecutive days with $60.63 million exiting the funds the day before.
Fidelity’s FBTC led the majority of outflows with $48.39 million withdrawn by investors, followed by Valkyrie’s BRRR, ARK 21Shares’ ARKB, and VanEck’s HODL with $9.27 million, $8.65 million, and $4.77 million in net redemptions, respectively.
The remaining eight BTC ETFs, including BlackRock’s IBIT, the largest BTC ETF in terms of net assets, saw zero flows on that day.
The daily volume of these investment products rose to $2.05 billion on Feb. 19, down from $2.83 billion the previous day.
Ethereum ETFs Show Positive Streak
In contrast, the nine spot Ethereum ETFs continued their positive streak, with inflows tripling from the previous day to reach $19.02 million on Feb. 19.
All inflows came from Fidelity’s FETH, which recorded $24.47 million. However, Grayscale’s ETHE saw $5.45 million in net redemptions, partially offsetting the gains. The other ETH ETFs remained neutral for the day.
The mixed market scenario reflects a broader shift in sentiment, with Bitcoin dropping below $95,000 recently as part of a continued downtrend since hitting its all-time high of $109,200 last month.
This decline seems to be driven by fading optimism about the potential creation of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve in the U.S. under a possible Trump administration.
Profit-taking by short-term investors, along with delayed crypto regulations and geopolitical tensions—such as U.S.-China tariff conflicts—are also extending Bitcoin’s consolidation phase, even though historical post-halving cycles often precede rallies.
Hillary Alder, co-founder and CCO of BitcoinOS, expressed that the sharp outflows in recent days suggest investors are taking profits and repositioning due to macroeconomic factors.
Alder added that another key driver is the “waning confidence in Trump approving a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve in the U.S.”
At the time of reporting, Bitcoin (BTC) was up 1.6% over the past day, trading at $97,122, while Ethereum (ETH) also rose 1.4%, trading at $2,729 per coin.