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Crypto ETF Flows Turn Positive as Bitcoin Funds Add $85.9…

U.S. spot crypto exchange-traded funds returned to net inflows on Friday, June 12, as Bitcoin ETFs attracted fresh capital after several days of redemptions. Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $85.9 million in net inflows for the session, while spot Ether ETFs posted $4.95 million in net outflows, leaving the combined crypto ETF complex with a net inflow of roughly $81 million.

The rebound was led by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust, which added $57.7 million and accounted for about two-thirds of total Bitcoin ETF inflows. Fidelity’s FBTC followed with $18 million, while Bitwise’s BITB brought in $5.2 million. Ark Invest and 21Shares’ ARKB added $3.2 million, and VanEck’s HODL recorded $1.8 million in inflows.

The most notable feature of the Bitcoin ETF data was the absence of fund-level outflows. Other spot Bitcoin products, including Grayscale’s GBTC, Grayscale’s lower-fee BTC product, Invesco’s BTCO, Franklin Templeton’s EZBC, Valkyrie’s BRRR and WisdomTree’s BTCW, recorded no net flow for the day. That marked a sharp improvement from earlier sessions, when withdrawals from large funds had dominated the flow picture.

Bitcoin ETFs snap losing streak

Friday’s inflow ended a run of negative sessions for U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs. The group had posted outflows earlier in the week, including $91.4 million on June 8, $77.4 million on June 9, $213.9 million on June 10 and $22.5 million on June 11. The June 12 reversal therefore offered the first clear sign that redemption pressure may be easing.

BlackRock’s IBIT remains the most important fund to watch because of its size, liquidity and role as the preferred vehicle for many institutional allocators. Its $57.7 million inflow was especially important because IBIT had seen sharp redemptions earlier in the week. A return to inflows suggests that some investors used the recent market weakness to rebuild exposure rather than continue cutting positions.

ETF flows matter because they provide one of the clearest daily measures of regulated demand for Bitcoin. When inflows are strong, ETFs absorb spot supply and can support price momentum. When outflows persist, they can reinforce selling pressure and weaken sentiment across the broader crypto market.

Ether ETFs remain under pressure

Spot Ether ETFs did not participate in the rebound. The category recorded $4.95 million in net outflows on June 12, extending a weaker pattern in institutional demand for ETH products. BlackRock’s ETHA saw the largest withdrawal, losing $4.53 million, while Fidelity’s FETH posted a smaller outflow of about $415,000. Other tracked Ether funds recorded no net flow for the session.

The contrast between Bitcoin and Ether flows shows that institutional demand remains uneven. Bitcoin ETFs attracted fresh capital after a difficult stretch, but Ether ETFs continued to struggle with inconsistent inflows and smaller asset bases. That gap reinforces Bitcoin’s stronger position as the primary institutional crypto allocation vehicle.

For the broader market, the June 12 data offers a cautiously positive signal. Bitcoin ETF demand improved, no Bitcoin fund posted an outflow, and the total crypto ETF complex returned to positive territory. However, Ether weakness and the recent run of redemptions suggest that confidence has not fully recovered.

The key question is whether Friday’s inflow becomes the start of a sustained reversal or merely a one-day pause in a volatile month. Continued inflows into IBIT and FBTC would strengthen the case for renewed institutional accumulation. Without follow-through, the crypto ETF market may remain tactical, with investors using regulated products to adjust exposure quickly as macro conditions, liquidity and price momentum shift.