
US spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs are experiencing sustained capital outflows, with total assets plunging from recent highs near $115 billion to approximately $83 billion for Bitcoin funds, while Ethereum ETFs have contracted from $18 billion to $11 billion.
This significant capital rotation comes as investors increasingly allocate to international equity ETFs, which recorded their strongest inflows in years—absorbing roughly one-third of total ETF inflows in January despite representing a smaller share of assets . The shift reflects rising Treasury yields, resilient US labor market data, and growing preference for cheaper overseas valuations, creating structural headwinds for crypto ETFs that previously amplified bullish momentum.
If you’ve been watching the crypto ETF flows since the start of 2026, you’ve witnessed something remarkable: the same vehicles that supercharged Bitcoin’s rally in 2024 are now acting as distribution channels.
The data tells a stark story. US spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen only two weeks of positive inflows so far in 2026, with total assets dropping sharply from recent highs near $115 billion to roughly $83 billion . That’s a staggering $32 billion exodus from products that were once viewed as the primary on-ramp for institutional capital.
Ethereum ETFs have fared even worse. These funds have seen total assets contract from around $18 billion to near $11 billion—a nearly 40% drawdown that reflects both price declines and genuine capital flight . The outflows accelerated in recent weeks, with February 12 seeing a single-day outflow of $410 million from Bitcoin ETFs alone, contributing to what’s shaping up as a fourth consecutive week of negative flows .
The iShares Ethereum Trust ETF (ETHA) recorded a notable $8.52 million outflow on February 6, trimming its assets under management to about $6.18 billion . While that represents just 0.14% of AUM, the move stands out in an asset class already under pressure and may signal growing institutional caution around Ethereum-linked exposure .
This isn’t random volatility or normal market noise. It’s capital leaving the asset class.
While crypto ETFs bleed, international equity markets are experiencing something close to a gold rush.
January 2026 brought a record $166 billion in net inflows to US-listed ETFs overall, surpassing the last three Januarys combined . But the composition tells the real story. International equity ETFs pulled in $68 billion in January—also a record—and outpaced US equity ETF inflows for the first time since February 2023 .
Morningstar’s data confirms the magnitude: international-equity ETFs led all asset classes in January with an estimated $51 billion in inflows, their largest monthly inflow on record . Despite accounting for roughly 15% of total ETF assets, international funds absorbed about one-third of all net inflows during the month .
Demand has been particularly strong for emerging markets. Diversified emerging-markets ETFs gathered $19 billion in January, setting the record for their largest monthly inflow . The iShares Core MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (IEMG) alone absorbed nearly $9 billion, second only to the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) in total inflows .
South Korean stocks have seen explosive gains, fueled by tech leadership and robust demand for the nuts and bolts behind artificial intelligence. Funds tracking the Kospi have recorded unprecedented interest, with the iShares MSCI South Korea ETF (EWY) rising 28% year-to-date on roughly $1.7 billion in net inflows .
The rotation appears driven by a simple valuation argument. The S&P 500 trades near 22 times forward 2026 earnings, compared to approximately 13 times earnings for the rest of the world . With US mega-cap tech names looking expensive and international markets offering cheaper valuations alongside improving macro conditions, institutional investors are rebalancing accordingly.
Understanding the “why” behind these flows requires looking at the macroeconomic landscape.
Stronger-than-anticipated US jobs data has pushed Treasury yields higher, fundamentally altering the risk-reward calculation for crypto exposure. US payrolls rose in January by the most in more than a year, with the unemployment rate unexpectedly falling to 4.3% .
Two-year Treasury yields climbed to around 3.5%, while 10-year yields rose to approximately 4.17% following the jobs report . Higher yields tighten financial conditions and increase the relative attractiveness of bonds—assets with guaranteed returns—compared to risk assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum.
“The January employment report showed continued improvement in the US labor market,” noted Mike Reid at RBC Capital Markets. “Looking ahead, this print solidifies our view that the Fed will go on a long pause in 2026” .
For crypto ETFs, which trade as high-beta liquidity plays sensitive to financial conditions, this macro environment creates structural headwinds. When capital moves toward safer or yield-generating assets, Bitcoin and Ethereum tend to weaken .
Bitcoin and Ethereum have increasingly traded as macro-sensitive risk assets, correlating with tech stocks and responding to liquidity expectations. This means they’re disproportionately affected when financial conditions tighten.
The Federal Reserve’s policy trajectory matters immensely. Interest-rate swaps after the strong jobs data showed traders pricing in less than a 5% chance of a rate cut in March, with only about 52 basis points of easing priced in by December . That’s a meaningful shift from earlier expectations of more aggressive cuts.
Perhaps the most significant development is the changing role of ETFs themselves.
In 2024, US spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs were a major source of demand, amplifying upward price moves through sustained inflows. They functioned as pressure valves, channeling institutional capital into crypto assets and reinforcing bullish momentum.
Now that mechanism is reversing.
Instead of reinforcing rallies, ETFs are acting as distribution channels . Each outflow represents not just selling pressure but a structural unwind of positions that previously supported prices. The funds that once magnified upside are now amplifying downside.
This creates a self-reinforcing dynamic. As prices fall, some investors redeem ETF shares. Those redemptions require funds to sell underlying Bitcoin and Ethereum, putting additional downward pressure on prices, which may trigger further redemptions.
Interestingly, not all crypto ETFs are suffering equally. Solana ETFs have bucked the trend, attracting approximately $270 million in net inflows even as Bitcoin and Ethereum funds bleed . This suggests that some investors view Solana as a distinct bet—perhaps on faster transaction speeds, lower fees, or a different developer ecosystem—rather than simply a correlated crypto play.
The short answer: probably not.
Crypto ETFs were never the entire story. They’re a vehicle for exposure, not the underlying asset itself. The rotation toward international equities and safer bonds reflects short-term macro positioning, not necessarily a rejection of crypto’s long-term value proposition.
“This does not invalidate the long-term crypto thesis,” notes the analysis. “However, it weakens the short-term liquidity backdrop” .
Several factors support this view:
Institutional adoption continues: Despite ETF outflows, major financial institutions continue building crypto infrastructure and offerings. The trend toward integration with traditional finance hasn’t reversed.
Stablecoin markets remain resilient: Unlike crypto prices, stablecoin market capitalization has held steady above $300 billion, suggesting that the infrastructure for crypto transactions and value transfer remains intact.
Regulatory progress continues: While the CLARITY Act faces political hurdles, the overall trajectory toward clearer regulation remains positive. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has explicitly called for passing crypto legislation to provide “comfort to the market” amid volatility.
Historical patterns: Crypto has survived multiple bear markets and periods of institutional skepticism. The current rotation may simply be another cycle in a volatile but upward-trending asset class.
For investors trying to navigate this environment, several considerations emerge.
In the short term, ETF outflows create a genuine liquidity challenge. Until capital rotation slows or macro conditions ease, outflows may continue to weigh on Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the broader crypto market .
This is particularly relevant given the scale of assets involved. With Bitcoin ETF assets down from nearly $170 billion at their peak to around $80 billion today, the unwind has already been substantial . How much further it goes depends on macro conditions and investor sentiment.
For long-term investors, lower prices may eventually present opportunities. Standard Chartered, despite cutting its 2026 Bitcoin target from $150,000 to $100,000, still expects year-end prices to recover to around $100,000 for Bitcoin and $4,000 for Ethereum . The bank warns of potential near-term downside to $50,000 for Bitcoin and $1,400 for Ethereum before any sustained recovery .
CryptoQuant’s analysis suggests that Bitcoin’s “ultimate” bear market bottom is around $55,000—a level not yet tested—and that market cycle indicators remain in “Bear Phase” rather than “Extreme Bear Phase,” suggesting bottoms typically take months to form .
The current rotation also offers a reminder about portfolio construction. International diversification—across both geographies and asset classes—can provide ballast when any single market faces headwinds. The investors moving capital from US crypto ETFs to international equities aren’t necessarily abandoning crypto forever; they’re rebalancing based on relative valuations and risk considerations.
The sustained outflows from Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs represent a genuine shift in institutional positioning. After a period of relentless inflows that amplified the 2024-2025 rally, the mechanism has reversed, and ETFs are now channeling capital away from crypto assets.
The proximate causes are clear: rising Treasury yields, strong US jobs data suggesting the Fed will remain on hold, and compelling valuations in international markets. Together, these factors have triggered a rotation away from crowded US growth trades—including crypto—and toward cheaper overseas opportunities.
Whether this represents a temporary rebalancing or a longer-term structural shift depends largely on macro conditions. If Treasury yields stabilize and international valuations converge with US levels, capital could flow back into crypto ETFs. If the macro environment continues to favor bonds and international equities, outflows may persist.
For now, investors should watch the data: ETF flows, Treasury yields, jobs reports, and inflation readings. These indicators will determine whether the current rotation continues or reverses.
As one analyst put it: “Crypto ETFs were a major source of demand in 2024, amplifying upward price moves through sustained inflows. Now that mechanism is reversing. Instead of reinforcing rallies, ETFs are acting as distribution channels” .
The long-term crypto thesis remains intact. But in the short term, the liquidity backdrop has fundamentally changed.
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