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BlackRock’s IBIT Dominates $331M Bitcoin ETF Outflow As Crypto Funds Shed $393M
Nearly the entire net outflow from U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds on Monday came from a single product. BlackRock’s IBIT hemorrhaged $326 million on May 19, leaving the total for all spot Bitcoin ETFs at a negative $331 million, according to data tracked by SoSoValue. The remaining Bitcoin ETFs saw only $5 million in combined net redemptions, making BlackRock’s move the day’s defining event.
Spot Ethereum ETFs added another $62.30 million to the red ink, though a single fund bucked the trend. Bitwise’s ETHW recorded the largest net inflow of the day at just $0.76 million, a sliver of positive flow against the broader crypto ETF retreat. The asymmetry between Bitcoin’s concentrated outflow and Ethereum’s quieter but steady drain leaves market participants parsing whether this marks a pause for breath or something more structural.
The heavy hand of BlackRock
When the world’s largest asset manager’s crypto product sees a near-solo redemption day on this scale, it gets attention. IBIT’s $326 million exit dwarfs any routine daily movement and signals that institutional rebalancing or a specific mandate shift was likely behind the number. Days like this often follow sharp price moves or precede macro events that large allocators front-run. Without a parallel sell-off across the broader Bitcoin ETF complex, the flow pattern points more to a single large holder than a panicked retail crowd.
Still, a single-day window is just that. What matters now is whether IBIT’s outflow proves to be a one-off adjustment or the start of a sequence. Flows into U.S. spot crypto ETFs have become the de facto sentiment barometer for how traditional finance is positioned, and a sustained bleed from the market leader would change that narrative quickly.
Ethereum’s quiet bleed and one green speck
Spot Ethereum ETFs lost $62.30 million with little fanfare, continuing a pattern of tepid demand that has marked the product category since its launch. The single $0.76 million inflow into Bitwise’s ETHW is not a sign of a reversal, but it does show that some capital still seeks exposure even when the broader current is out. That kind of selective flow can matter later if it becomes a consistent trickle.
Contrasting the Bitcoin and Ethereum ETF outflow sizes also clarifies where institutional conviction sits. Bitcoin ETFs have built deeper liquidity and larger asset bases, so large redemptions hit harder in dollar terms. Ethereum’s lower absolute number reflects a market that hasn’t yet attracted the same scale of institutional allocation, which insulates it from dramatic single-fund outflows but also keeps it in a more fragile liquidity position.
Regulatory overhang and competing institutional bets
Timing matters. The outflows land just as Washington’s crypto bill battles heat up ahead of a Senate vote, with banking interests pushing late amendments that could reshape market structure rules. Uncertainty like that can freeze institutional allocation or prompt preemptive risk reduction, particularly in vehicles that trade with the liquidity of ETFs. Fund managers don’t need a law to pass; they just need the optics of a hostile floor debate to get cautious.
At the same time, money is moving elsewhere in crypto. Institutional staking products tied to networks like Sui saw significant demand recently, and the broader tokenization market just crossed $20 billion in on-chain assets. The flow picture suggests that capital isn’t abandoning crypto; it is rotating into yield-bearing instruments, governance tokens, and tokenized real-world assets that offer different risk-reward profiles than pure spot Bitcoin and Ether exposure.
What remains unanswered is whether May 19’s outflow cluster is an aberration or the leading edge of a repositioning that will show up in the next several trading sessions. A second consecutive day of heavy IBIT redemptions would force a reevaluation of the institutional demand thesis that has undergirded the spot ETF bull case. A quiet Tuesday, by contrast, would let the market write this off as a large rebalance and nothing more. Flow data for the rest of the week is now the real story.