U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) notched their second consecutive session of outflows on Thursday, because the main cryptocurrency erased its bounce from final week’s crypto crash, momentarily returning to the $65,000 space.
The 11 Bitcoin funds recorded $410.4 million in outflows amid heightened macro jitters, extending the two-day losses to $686 million, based on SoSoValue knowledge.
The exodus was led by BlackRock’s IBIT, which noticed $158 million in redemptions. Constancy’s FBTC logged outflows totaling $104.13 million, whereas funding merchandise from Grayscale and Bitwise collectively noticed roughly $65 million in redemptions.
Regardless of the near-term promoting strain, the broader institutional presence of those merchandise stays vital. Since launching two years in the past, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have attracted complete web inflows of $54.31 billion. Based on SoSoValue, the funds now maintain mixed web property equal to six.3% of Bitcoin’s total market capitalization.
Bitcoin’s Actual Take a look at Forward: Analyst Factors To Potential $50K Backside
After briefly dipping to $65,243 earlier, Bitcoin was buying and selling for $66,985 at publication time, reflecting a 1.6% decline over the previous 24 hours, based on CoinGecko.
On Thursday, the extensively monitored Crypto Concern & Greed Index revealed by Different fell to a studying of 5, signaling excessive concern amongst market individuals — a degree deeper than these recorded through the main market downturns of 2022 and the 2020 pandemic-driven crash.
Including to market considerations, longtime crypto bull Geoff Kendrick of Commonplace Chartered sharply lowered his 2026 worth targets for Bitcoin, Ether, Solana, BNB, and Avalanche, whereas cautioning that Bitcoin might decline to as little as $50,000.
“We anticipate additional worth capitulation over the following few months,” Kendrick wrote in a Thursday report. “As soon as these lows are reached, we anticipate a worth restoration for the rest of the 12 months,” he added, projecting year-end costs for BTC and ETH at $100,000 and $4,000, respectively.
Bitcoin rose to almost $98,000 in mid-January after a two-week advance from round $87,000. The following decline towards $60,000 was accompanied by notable outflows from spot Bitcoin ETFs, as buyers withdrew vital capital through the pullback.
Regardless of volatility, investor sentiment towards Bitcoin’s longer-term outlook seems comparatively secure, as mirrored within the resilience of spot ETF property beneath administration (AUM).
Knowledge from Checkonchain point out that the mixed AUM of the 11 spot Bitcoin ETFs has declined by roughly 7% since early October, from 1.37 million BTC to 1.29 million BTC. Over the identical interval, Bitcoin has retreated greater than 46% from its October 2025 peak above $126,000.

