TL;DR
- BTC -0.31% and ETH +0.29% funds saw about $1.07 billion in outflows.
- Spot Bitcoin ETFs accounted for most of the pressure, with about $1 billion leaving last week.
- The outflow ended a six-week inflow streak for crypto ETF demand.
- Bitcoin dropped below $76,700, its lowest level since May 1.
- Liquidations added pressure, with market trackers reporting more than $660 million in crypto positions wiped out.
Bitcoin and Ethereum funds posted roughly $1.07 billion in outflows as crypto ETF demand reversed after six straight weeks of inflows, removing one of the market’s strongest support signals during a fresh selloff.
- TL;DR
- ETF Outflows Remove a Major Support Line
- Bitcoin Breaks Below a Key Short-Term Level
- Ethereum Faces Heavier Liquidation Stress
- Liquidations Deepen the Market Flush
- The Six-Week Inflow Streak Had Been Holding Sentiment Together
- Macro Pressure Still Controls the Tape
- What Traders Are Watching Now
- Outlook
- Disclaimer
Spot Bitcoin ETFs carried most of the damage, with about $1 billion in net outflows last week. The move marked the largest weekly Bitcoin ETF withdrawal since January 30, when the products saw about $1.49 billion in outflows. Despite the weekly reversal, Bitcoin ETF flows remained positive for May, with about $252.18 million in month-to-date inflows.
The redemptions landed as Bitcoin fell below $76,700, its lowest level since May 1. The selloff also triggered heavy liquidations across crypto derivatives markets, with CoinMarketCap-linked data cited by Investors.com showing more than $699 million in total crypto liquidations over 24 hours.
ETF Outflows Remove a Major Support Line
ETF flows had helped keep the BTC -0.31% market steady through several weeks of choppy trading. When regulated products keep attracting capital, they can absorb part of the selling pressure coming from spot traders, leveraged accounts, or short-term profit-taking.
Last week’s reversal weakened that setup.
A $1 billion Bitcoin ETF outflow does not automatically translate into the same amount of immediate spot selling. Redemptions move through issuers, authorized participants, market makers, and hedging activity. The signal still matters because the direction of capital changed at the same time price support failed.
The market has shifted from steady ETF demand to a test of whether the outflow was a one-week reset or the start of a deeper redemption cycle.
Bitcoin Breaks Below a Key Short-Term Level
Bitcoin’s break below $76,700 made the flow reversal harder for traders to ignore. A softer ETF week can be absorbed when price is stable. A large outflow during a monthly low carries a different message: institutional-facing demand cooled while spot momentum was already weakening.
The next short-term test sits around the upper-$70K range. A fast recovery above $78K–$80K would help repair sentiment and reduce pressure on leveraged traders. A weak bounce below that zone would leave the market exposed to another support test.
The pressure is not only coming from ETF flows. Rising yields, renewed geopolitical tension, and weaker risk appetite have also pushed traders away from high-beta assets. Investors.com reported that Bitcoin’s fall came as markets reacted to a spike in Treasury yields and fresh geopolitical concerns.
Ethereum Faces Heavier Liquidation Stress
ETH +0.29% was hit hard during the same risk-off move.
More than $283 million in Ethereum positions were liquidated over the latest 24-hour window cited by Investors.com, exceeding the more than $190 million in Bitcoin liquidations reported for the same period.
That liquidation mix shows the selloff was not limited to Bitcoin ETF flows. Ethereum traders were also heavily exposed to the downside, and ETH’s fund-demand story remains less dominant than Bitcoin’s. When redemptions, weak price action, and liquidations arrive together, Ethereum can lose support faster than a headline ETF figure alone suggests.
For ETH, the next question is whether fund demand stabilizes while derivatives pressure cools. A recovery without lower liquidations would be fragile.
Liquidations Deepen the Market Flush
Liquidation data varied by tracker, but both major reports pointed to a sharp leverage reset. Investors.com cited more than $699 million in total crypto liquidations, while The Economic Times reported about $661 million in liquidations as Bitcoin dropped to a two-week low near $76,700.
The difference is normal during fast markets because liquidation trackers use different exchange coverage, timestamps, and asset filters. The market signal is still clear: leveraged long exposure was reduced quickly as BTC and ETH moved lower.
Forced selling can turn a normal pullback into a sharper flush. When traders are liquidated, positions are closed automatically, adding sell pressure into an already weak tape.
Also learn more about ETF Solana Guide 2026
The Six-Week Inflow Streak Had Been Holding Sentiment Together
The six-week inflow streak had supported the view that institutional demand remained active despite macro pressure. ETF buyers were not enough to prevent every pullback, but they gave the market a consistent demand story.
That support is now weaker.
One outflow week does not break the long-term ETF thesis. Bitcoin ETFs have already become a major gateway for regulated crypto exposure, and monthly flows remain positive. The risk is that repeated outflows could force traders to reassess whether ETF demand is still strong enough to absorb volatility.
For now, the market needs daily flow stabilization more than another bullish narrative. Fresh inflows would show that investors treated the drop as a reset. Another heavy redemption week would confirm a more defensive shift.
Macro Pressure Still Controls the Tape
ETF outflows arrived during a broader risk-off move. Bitcoin had already been under pressure from higher Treasury yields, oil-price concerns, and inflation fears in earlier sessions. That backdrop has made crypto more sensitive to every flow reversal.
Institutional adoption gives Bitcoin and Ethereum deeper market structure, but it also links them more closely to traditional risk cycles. When investors reduce exposure to growth stocks, crypto equities, and high-volatility assets, ETF products can move from support to pressure quickly.
Crypto-linked stocks also weakened during the latest selloff, adding another signal that investors were cutting exposure across the digital-asset trade rather than only rotating between tokens.
What Traders Are Watching Now
Bitcoin needs to reclaim $78K–$80K to reduce the immediate damage from the ETF outflow week. A recovery into that zone would suggest the market absorbed the redemption shock.
A failure to reclaim the range would keep the focus on lower support levels and daily ETF flow reports.
The main watchlist:
- spot Bitcoin ETF daily flows;
- Ethereum fund flows;
- BTC recovery toward $78K–$80K;
- ETH liquidation pressure;
- total crypto liquidations;
- Treasury yields and dollar strength;
- crypto stock performance.
The next weekly ETF report will matter more than usual. A return to inflows would calm the market. Another large outflow would make the six-week streak look like a completed phase rather than a brief pause.
Outlook
Crypto ETF outflows have become the market’s clearest warning signal this week.
Bitcoin and Ethereum funds lost more than $1 billion just as BTC hit its weakest level of the month and leveraged positions were flushed across the market. The long-term ETF story is still intact, but short-term support has weakened.
Bitcoin bulls need two things quickly: price recovery above the upper-$70K range and a return to ETF inflows. Without those signals, traders may stay defensive and watch whether the selloff extends toward lower support.
The market is not dealing with ETF outflows in isolation. Redemptions, liquidations, and macro pressure are hitting at the same time. That combination makes the next few sessions important for both Bitcoin and Ethereum sentiment.
Disclaimer
This content is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Cryptocurrency markets are volatile. Always do your own research and consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.


