- U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $648.6 million in outflows Monday, the largest since January
- BlackRock, Fidelity, and ARK funds all saw major institutional withdrawals
- Rising oil prices, inflation fears, and geopolitical tensions pressured crypto markets
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs experienced another brutal day of institutional selling after recording $648.6 million in net outflows on Monday, marking the largest single-day withdrawal since January 29. The heavy exits extended last week’s $1 billion wave of outflows and reinforced growing risk-off sentiment across crypto markets.

BlackRock’s IBIT led the withdrawals with roughly $448 million exiting the fund, while ARK and 21Shares’ ARKB lost another $109 million. Fidelity’s FBTC also recorded more than $63 million in outflows alongside smaller withdrawals from several other major issuers.
Macro Pressure Is Hitting Crypto Again
The ETF selloff arrived as Bitcoin slipped below the $77,000 level during the weekend amid rising geopolitical tensions involving the United States and Iran. At the same time, surging oil prices and stronger Treasury yields increased pressure across broader risk markets.
Higher energy prices have intensified inflation concerns, while rising bond yields continue attracting capital away from volatile assets like crypto. Analysts say institutions are increasingly using Bitcoin ETFs as short-term liquidity management tools rather than purely long-term exposure vehicles during uncertain macro periods.
Institutions Are De-Risking, Not Necessarily Leaving
Market researchers described the outflows more as tactical repositioning rather than a collapse in institutional confidence toward Bitcoin itself. According to analysts, firms appear to be locking in profits and reducing exposure temporarily while waiting for clearer signals from the Federal Reserve and broader macro conditions.

Some analysts also pointed out that stablecoin market capitalizations continued rising during the correction, suggesting large amounts of capital may simply be sitting on the sidelines waiting for lower re-entry points rather than fully exiting crypto markets altogether.
Bitcoin’s Next Move Depends on the Fed
Bitcoin is currently attempting to stabilize around the $76,000 to $77,000 support range as traders closely monitor future comments from Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh regarding inflation and interest rate policy.
Markets remain highly sensitive to any signals around future rate hikes, monetary tightening, or liquidity conditions. If macroeconomic pressure eases and ETF flows stabilize, analysts believe Bitcoin could recover relatively quickly from the recent correction.
For now though, institutional money appears focused on caution as volatility and geopolitical uncertainty continue driving short-term market behavior.











