Key facts
- Spot Bitcoin ETFs have experienced outflows of $2.1 billion in June.
- This follows $2.4 billion in outflows during May.
- Net assets in these ETFs have fallen by $33 billion since May 10.
- Bitcoin's price has dropped 27% from its May peak.
- Analysts attribute outflows to leveraged fund redemptions, fee competition, and capital rotation.
Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have experienced significant outflows in June, with $2.1 billion withdrawn so far, following $2.4 billion in outflows during May. This trend has contributed to a substantial decline in the net assets of these products, which have fallen from $109 billion to $77 billion in the past month, mirroring Bitcoin's 27% price drop from its May peak.
Analysts suggest the pace of outflows is moderating, indicating exhaustion rather than a building pressure. Key drivers identified include leveraged funds redeeming shares after arbitrage opportunities, capital moving away from higher-fee ETFs, and a broader rotation into AI equities and upcoming tech IPOs. Some funds have seen net inflows, suggesting concentrated selling rather than a general market downturn.
The outflows are also influenced by macroeconomic and geopolitical factors, including uncertainty surrounding the U.S.-Iran conflict, which has led to oil price spikes and increased inflation. May's annual inflation rate rose to 4.2%, reinforcing expectations that the Federal Reserve will maintain restrictive monetary policy, potentially pressuring crypto prices further.
Despite the challenging environment, some experts believe that for ETF outflows to cease, spot demand for Bitcoin needs to increase, pushing its price back into the $70,000 range. Others argue that a shift in interest rate policy from the Federal Reserve is a more critical catalyst than a price rally alone. The market is currently defending the 200-week moving average, with a fragile base forming around that level.
