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BlackRock’s Crypto Investors Face 40% Loss as Bitcoin ETF…

Why Are IBIT Investors Now Under Pressure?

The average investor in BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust is now down roughly 40%, a sharp reversal from gains of about 30% as recently as mid-2025, according to Bespoke Investment Group data reported by Bloomberg.

The shift shows how quickly the spot bitcoin ETF trade has turned against mainstream investors who entered through regulated products after the January 2024 launch. IBIT gathered assets quickly and became the largest U.S. spot bitcoin ETF by assets under management, but bitcoin’s decline has erased the earlier cushion for many buyers.

IBIT has attracted $60.77 billion in cumulative inflows since launch, yet it now holds $44.42 billion in net assets, according to SoSoValue data. The roughly $16 billion gap reflects the impact of bitcoin’s price drop on the market value of the fund’s holdings. The gap has also widened from about $13.4 billion in mid-June, showing that price weakness and continued withdrawals are compounding the pressure.

Nate Geraci, president of NovaDius Wealth Management, called the loss “a brutal intro to btc for mainstream investors.” The remark captures the core issue for the ETF market: the products made bitcoin easier to buy, but they did not reduce the volatility of the underlying asset.

How Severe Was The Latest ETF Outflow?

U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs recorded about $1.79 billion in net outflows in the week ending June 26, their second-largest weekly withdrawal since the funds began trading in January 2024. Only the $2.61 billion outflow in late February 2025 was larger.

The week also extended a longer deterioration in ETF demand. Friday’s $444.51 million net outflow stretched the daily outflow streak to 7 sessions and capped the category’s seventh consecutive negative week. That is the longest weekly outflow run on record for U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs.

The selling was concentrated. Friday’s outflow came entirely from IBIT, while other spot bitcoin ETFs saw no significant flows. Thursday was the heaviest day of the latest run, with $696.29 million leaving the category.

The scale of the outflows matters because spot bitcoin ETFs have been one of the most visible channels of institutional and adviser-led demand. When that channel weakens for several weeks, bitcoin loses a major support mechanism that helped absorb supply during earlier parts of the cycle.

Investor Takeaway

The ETF story has shifted from access to drawdown management. IBIT still dominates the category, but the gap between cumulative inflows and current net assets shows that large inflow totals can hide poor entry timing when bitcoin prices fall sharply.

What Role Is Macro Pressure Playing?

The ETF outflows have coincided with a more hawkish Federal Reserve backdrop. The central bank held rates at its June 18 meeting and removed easing language from its statement, while traders later priced in better-than-even odds of a rate increase in December.

That change matters for bitcoin because higher expected rates can reduce appetite for long-duration and high-volatility assets. A stronger policy-rate outlook also tends to support the dollar and raise the opportunity cost of holding assets that do not generate yield.

Bitcoin traded near $60,750 on Saturday, down more than half from its October 2025 record of $126,272. The price decline has turned earlier ETF inflows into a mark-to-market test for investors who entered through spot products rather than crypto-native exchanges.

The result is a feedback loop. Weak price action reduces the value of ETF assets, outflows remove a source of demand, and continued withdrawals can deepen concerns that mainstream investors are losing patience with the trade.

Are Ether ETFs Facing The Same Problem?

Spot ether ETFs also remained under pressure. The funds lost $273.34 million in the week ending June 26, marking their seventh straight weekly outflow. That run is one week short of the 8-week streak recorded in early 2025.

Friday’s $12.85 million outflow came entirely from BlackRock’s ETHA, the largest ether ETF by net assets. Across the category, ether ETFs hold $8.38 billion in net assets, equal to 4.42% of ether’s market value, against $10.90 billion in cumulative inflows.

Ether traded near $1,600 on Saturday. As with bitcoin, the ETF structure has not insulated investors from the underlying asset’s drawdown. The difference is scale: ether ETF assets remain much smaller than bitcoin ETF assets, making the category less central to overall crypto market liquidity but still important as a measure of institutional demand.

Investor Takeaway

Bitcoin and ether ETFs are showing the same directional weakness, but bitcoin remains the more important market signal. The size of IBIT and the depth of its drawdown make bitcoin ETF flows a direct test of whether mainstream demand can withstand a prolonged price decline.

Why Are Smaller Crypto Funds Bucking The Trend?

Newer crypto funds tied to Hyperliquid, Solana, and XRP saw more mixed flows, but they remain much smaller than the bitcoin and ether ETF markets. Together, those products hold about $2 billion in net assets, compared with $72.82 billion for bitcoin funds and $8.38 billion for ether funds.

Hyperliquid funds stood out. The three products took in $108.09 million on Thursday, June 25, their largest day since launching on May 12, then added $1.82 million on Friday to reach $293.92 million in cumulative inflows.

XRP funds drew $15.63 million on Friday, their largest daily inflow in weeks, lifting cumulative inflows to $1.47 billion. Solana ETFs were roughly flat, with a $3.94 million outflow in their most recent reported session on June 25.

The contrast shows that some investors are still rotating into newer crypto exposures, but the amounts remain too small to offset the pressure in bitcoin and ether products. Hyperliquid’s strongest day was still well below the $444.51 million that left IBIT alone on Friday.

For the broader market, the message is clear. Crypto ETF demand has not disappeared, but it has become more selective and less able to support the largest assets during a deeper drawdown. Until bitcoin ETF flows stabilize, the category’s record outflow streak will remain a key measure of mainstream investor stress.