Spot Bitcoin ETFs Lose $290M as Ether Funds Extend Outflow Streak
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Not a single US spot Bitcoin ETF recorded a net inflow on May 15. Combined outflows across all twelve funds hit $290 million, according to the original report from SoSoValue data. The uniform lack of demand stands out even against a backdrop of mixed institutional appetite this year.
Spot Ethereum ETFs fared no better, shedding a net $65.65 million. That marked the fifth consecutive day of withdrawals for the ether vehicles, deepening a streak that has now bled hundreds of millions from the products. Unlike earlier outflow waves that saw selective buying across a few funds, this episode offered no green shoots.
Capital Rotation and Regulatory Shadows
The broad-based ETF exodus comes as other corners of the crypto market show far more life. SUI surged 18% to $1.24 on institutional staking and a major fintech integration, while altcoin gainers like TON, SIREN, and VVV posted double-digit weekly returns. That split suggests capital is not simply leaving digital assets wholesale; it is rotating away from passive, broad-based bitcoin and ether exposure toward higher-beta names and specific ecosystem plays.
Regulatory overhang is adding to the cautious mood. With a landmark US crypto bill facing fresh opposition from banking interests just days before a Senate vote, institutional allocators may be hedging against a policy stall. Banks are actively trying to derail the legislation, reintroducing uncertainty that can cool ETF flows even when the price outlook remains constructive. ETF flows have historically been sensitive to regulatory headlines, and the current vacuum of positive news leaves little reason for new money to enter.
Where Institutional Money Is Moving
If spot crypto ETFs are losing steam, institutional capital is finding another outlet: tokenized real-world assets. The past week saw the RWA market cross $20 billion on-chain, a $4.2 billion acquisition by Bullish, and the first live settlement between Ondo and JPMorgan. Tokenization adoption is accelerating at a pace that contrasts sharply with the outflows from pure bitcoin and ether ETFs.
That divergence may reflect a more mature institutional calculus. Direct ETF exposure offers easy beta to spot crypto prices, but deep-pocketed investors are increasingly focused on yield-bearing, regulated instruments that sit closer to traditional finance than to speculative altcoin rallies. The $290 million bitcoin ETF drain and the persistent ether bleeding may thus be less about a bearish macro call and more about a tactical shift toward areas where liquidity, regulatory clarity, and cash flow are more predictable.
What remains uncertain is whether the current ETF outflow streak marks a short-term breather or the start of a longer period of disinterest. The next batch of US inflation data and any movement on the crypto bill in the Senate could quickly reverse the flows. For now, the numbers paint a rare picture: a market where every single spot bitcoin ETF was a net loser in a single trading day.
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