Crypto ETF flows turned negative on Wednesday, July 8, as U.S. spot Bitcoin funds recorded $84.9 million of net outflows, reversing the modest inflow seen a day earlier and showing that institutional demand remained uneven after the Independence Day holiday break.
According to Farside Investors, Bitcoin ETFs lost $84.9 million on July 8, while Ether ETFs added $70.5 million and Solana ETFs lost $8.6 million. Across the three categories, the combined daily flow was negative by about $23 million. The data marked a shift from July 7, when Bitcoin, Ether and Solana ETFs were all positive, with combined inflows of roughly $50.1 million.
The July 8 figures show a market still struggling to establish a consistent post-holiday direction. Bitcoin ETFs had rebounded strongly on July 6 with $265.7 million of inflows, slowed to $21.5 million on July 7, and then flipped back into outflows the following day. The pattern suggests that ETF demand has not yet returned to the broad, persistent buying seen during stronger accumulation phases.
ETF flows remain one of the most closely watched institutional demand indicators for digital assets. They show whether traditional-market investors are adding regulated crypto exposure through brokerage accounts or reducing positions through redemptions. In July’s first full trading week, the message has been mixed: buyers have remained active, but flows are concentrated and increasingly dependent on a small number of funds.
Bitcoin Funds Slip Back Into Outflows
The weakness on July 8 was concentrated in three Bitcoin products. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust recorded $59.1 million of outflows, Fidelity’s FBTC lost $14.9 million and Grayscale’s GBTC saw $63.7 million exit. Grayscale’s lower-fee Bitcoin Mini Trust partially offset those redemptions with $52.8 million of inflows.
All other Bitcoin ETFs were flat for the session, including Bitwise’s BITB, Ark and 21Shares’ ARKB, Invesco’s BTCO, Franklin’s EZBC, Valkyrie’s BRRR, VanEck’s HODL, WisdomTree’s BTCW and Morgan Stanley’s MSBT.
The reversal in IBIT was particularly notable because BlackRock’s fund had carried the category on July 7 with $54.8 million of inflows and had attracted $209.4 million on July 6. When the largest and most liquid Bitcoin ETF flips into outflows, the broader category becomes more vulnerable, especially if other issuers fail to attract offsetting demand.
The outflows do not necessarily signal a sustained institutional retreat, but they show that investors remain tactical. After a volatile late-June period, allocators appear to be rotating selectively rather than adding exposure across the board.
Ether Strength Narrows the Damage
Ether ETFs provided the strongest positive offset on July 8, adding $70.5 million in net inflows. Fidelity’s FETH led the category with $69.2 million, while VanEck’s ETHV added $1.3 million. BlackRock’s ETHA, Bitwise’s ETHW, 21Shares’ TETH, Invesco’s QETH, Franklin’s EZET, Grayscale’s ETHE and Grayscale’s ETH were flat.
The Ether inflow was significant because the category had added $26.9 million on July 7, entirely through BlackRock’s ETHA. The shift to Fidelity-led demand on July 8 suggests that institutional interest in Ether exposure may be broadening, even as Bitcoin funds lose momentum.
Solana ETFs moved in the opposite direction, posting $8.6 million of net outflows. Bitwise’s BSOL lost $6.6 million and Grayscale’s GSOL lost $2.0 million, while VanEck’s VSOL, Fidelity’s FSOL, VanEck’s TSOL and Franklin’s SOEZ were flat.
The market signal from July 8 is cautious rather than decisively bearish. Bitcoin ETF outflows outweighed Ether strength and Solana weakness, leaving total crypto ETF flows slightly negative. More importantly, the data showed heavy concentration: Bitcoin redemptions were led by IBIT and GBTC, Ether inflows came almost entirely from FETH, and Solana outflows were limited to two funds.
For crypto markets, the next few sessions will be important. A return to broad Bitcoin inflows would suggest July 8 was a temporary pause. Continued redemptions, however, would indicate that ETF investors are still reducing risk despite pockets of demand for Ether.







