Bitcoin Funds See Inflows After $8 Billion Outflow Streak, but $80,000 Remains a Barrier
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The longest outflow streak in digital asset fund history has finally snapped. For eight straight weeks, institutional crypto products bled a cumulative $8 billion, according to CoinShares. That run of redemptions ended last week, with $287 million flowing back into the sector — a modest reversal that quickly accelerated after a softer-than-expected US inflation print.
Tuesday and Wednesday alone brought a further $415 million in inflows, much of it into Bitcoin vehicles, as detailed in the original report. The data suggests that rate-sensitive positioning remains the dominant driver: when CPI and PPI figures hinted at easing price pressures, traders rushed to re-enter, likely on the view that the Federal Reserve could lean less hawkish.
Inflows Don’t Signal a Trend Change
The return to inflows is notable, but CoinShares warns against reading it as a structural shift. Even with the latest $702 million combined tally, the firm sees Bitcoin staying stuck in a range below $80,000. That price level has become a psychological ceiling, one that requires more than a single data point to crack.
Bitcoin funds had been losing ground since mid-May, a period that coincided with disappointing US economic data and hawkish Fed rhetoric. The break in the streak does not alter the underlying macro picture. CoinShares explicitly states that a move above $80,000 looks unlikely without a clearer shift in monetary policy expectations — meaning markets need to price in rate cuts, not just softer inflation.
This hesitation mirrors broader institutional caution. While tokenization of real-world assets has surged past $20 billion on-chain and major players like Bullish are buying infrastructure firms, as covered in recent BlockchainReporter coverage, the flows into pure crypto funds remain choppy and macro-dependent.
Liquidity and the Rate-Cut Narrative
What matters now is how the market interprets the Fed’s next moves. The SUI token’s 18% surge last week, driven by institutional staking demand, shows that pockets of deep liquidity can still ignite sharp rallies. But Bitcoin, as the macro bellwether, requires a broader liquidity impulse to break its multi-month range.
Softer inflation data can trigger relief rallies, yet traders have seen such snapbacks fade before. The crucial question is whether the Fed will signal a dovish pivot when it meets next. Without that, the inflows may simply represent short-covering or tactical positioning rather than a durable shift. CoinShares’ own caution reflects the reality that crypto remains tightly coupled to global liquidity cycles.
Regulatory developments add another layer of uncertainty. A landmark US crypto bill is facing last-minute opposition from banks just days before a Senate vote, as detailed in another BlockchainReporter story. If the bill stalls or gets watered down, it could dampen institutional enthusiasm for crypto products, reinforcing the rangebound thesis.
The $80,000 Hurdle
For now, Bitcoin has a clear ceiling. Eight weeks of outflows have drained momentum, and the sudden influx of $702 million, while welcome, does not repair the damage to technical structure or investor sentiment overnight. CoinShares’ outlook fits a market that is waiting for a catalyst — either a confirmed rate cut path or a game-changing regulatory decision.
Until either materializes, Bitcoin is likely to churn between roughly $65,000 and $80,000, with institutional flows reacting sharply to each macro data release but failing to commit. The end of the record outflow streak is a necessary first step toward recovery, but it’s not the same thing as a sustained uptrend.
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