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Bitcoin ETFs Lose $1.26B as XRP and HYPE Funds Attract Fresh Inflows

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Bitcoin ETFs Lose $1.26B as XRP and HYPE Funds Attract Fresh Inflows

The week of May 18–22 will be remembered as one of the starkest divergences in the short history of crypto exchange-traded funds — not because the market collapsed, but because it quietly reorganized itself.

Spot bitcoin ETFs recorded net outflows of $1.26 billion for the week, making it one of the weakest weekly performances of 2026. The overwhelming share of the selling pressure came from BlackRock’s IBIT, which alone shed $1.01 billion over the five trading days. Fidelity’s FBTC followed with $111.5 million in outflows, while Ark & 21Shares’ ARKB lost another $106.8 million. Additional withdrawals came from Bitwise’s BITB, VanEck’s HODL, Franklin’s EZBC, Valkyrie’s BRRR, and Invesco’s BTCO.

The only bright spot among bitcoin products? Morgan Stanley’s MSBT, which attracted a modest $1.1 million inflow — a drop in the ocean against the broader tide of redemptions.

Combined with the previous week’s figures, spot bitcoin funds shed more than $2.26 billion in just 14 days, pushing the category’s total assets under management below the $100 billion threshold. That’s a significant psychological marker for an asset class that crossed it with fanfare only months ago.

Ethereum Extends Its Losing Streak

Ethereum ETF outflows told a similarly grim story. The nine funds tracking the second-largest cryptocurrency posted $471 million in combined outflows across the past two weeks, extending their losing streak to 10 consecutive sessions — the category’s most sustained period of outflows since March 2025. For the week of May 18–22 alone, ether ETFs shed $216 million, with BlackRock’s ETHA consistently leading the declines, alongside notable withdrawals from Fidelity’s FETH and Grayscale’s ether products.

The Macro Trigger: Rates, Inflation, and a New Fed Chair

This isn’t simply a crypto story — it’s a macro story wearing crypto clothing. The robust rally observed during spring 2026, which drew $2.9 billion in ETF inflows across March and April, was built on the premise that the Federal Reserve would execute a series of interest rate cuts throughout the year. That thesis has significantly reversed as recent economic prints show inflation remaining stubbornly high. Compounding the hawkish data is the recent leadership transition at the Federal Reserve: Kevin Warsh’s confirmation and swearing-in as Fed chair have injected fresh uncertainty into the central bank’s policy reaction function.

Futures markets on the CME now reflect roughly a 39% probability of a rate hike at forward 2026 meetings, while Polymarket pricing suggests a 62% chance of zero rate cuts for the entire calendar year. In a higher-for-longer rate environment, the case for holding speculative risk assets weakens — and institutional allocators have been acting accordingly.

Bitcoin ETF Data For May/2026 (Source: SoSoValue)

Bitcoin ETF Data For May/2026 (Source: SoSoValue)

The Rotation Trade: Where the Money Is Actually Going

Here’s the counter-narrative that the headline outflow numbers obscure: institutional capital isn’t leaving crypto. It’s moving within it.

Spot XRP ETFs attracted $22 million in net inflows during the week, with products from Canary, Franklin, and Bitwise all contributing to the gains. Solana ETFs recorded $15.6 million in net inflows, led by Fidelity’s FSOL and Bitwise’s BSOL.

But the most striking number came from a category that barely existed a fortnight ago. 21Shares launched its spot THYP ETF on Nasdaq on May 12, followed closely by Bitwise’s BHYP on the NYSE on May 15. In their first full week of trading, HYPE ETFs drew $72.4 million in net inflows — a remarkable debut for products tied to Hyperliquid, a decentralized exchange token that has become one of 2026’s breakout assets.

On their strongest single day, the two HYPE funds recorded $25.5 million in combined net inflows — THYP pulling in $16.7 million and BHYP adding $8.8 million. Peter Chung, head of research at Presto Research, noted that “institutions appear to be seizing the opportunity: early data shows they are piling into HYPE ETFs faster than they did into BTC ETFs on a market-cap-adjusted basis.”

HYPE ETF Data For May/2026 (Source: SoSoValue)

HYPE ETF Data For May/2026 (Source: SoSoValue)

What Makes HYPE Different?

Hyperliquid’s transition from a high-growth DeFi venue to an institutionally accessible asset is grounded in real operational metrics. The platform processed $2.9 trillion in perpetual futures volume in 2025, a more than 400% increase from the prior year, and now routinely handles around $8 billion in daily volume.

HYPE has gained 147% year-to-date in 2026, rising from $25 to an all-time high above $62, while Bitcoin and Ethereum declined over the same period. The token’s deflationary buyback mechanism — where a significant portion of protocol revenue is used to repurchase HYPE — has added a structural bid beneath the price that pure speculative interest alone cannot explain.

Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan described Hyperliquid as a “super app” targeting the $600 trillion global asset market rather than the $3 trillion crypto sector alone — a framing that helps explain why institutional interest has accelerated so sharply.

Hyperliquid (HYPE) Price Chart (Source: CoinmarketCap)

Hyperliquid (HYPE) Price Chart (Source: CoinmarketCap)

A Market That’s Maturing, Not Retreating

The headline reads as a Bitcoin exit, but the actual fund flow data across the rest of the crypto stack tells a very different story about where institutional capital is moving. What you actually have is institutional capital reweighting within the asset class, not leaving it.

Mounting ETF outflows, rising demand for downside options, and bearish near-term sentiment all weigh on Bitcoin. But XRP outperformed Ethereum during the selloff, and other altcoins including TON, Dogecoin, and Chainlink also attracted capital — suggesting selectivity, not panic.

The week of May 18–22 didn’t signal crypto’s decline. It signaled crypto’s differentiation. Investors are no longer treating the entire asset class as a single trade. They’re underwriting specific narratives: infrastructure, derivatives dominance, payment utility, ecosystem growth. Bitcoin and Ether, for now, aren’t telling those stories loudly enough to hold institutional patience through a hawkish macro storm.

The capital is still in the room. It just moved to a different corner.

The post Bitcoin ETFs Lose $1.26B as XRP and HYPE Funds Attract Fresh Inflows appeared first on NFT Plazas.

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