Bitcoin ETF Flows Dashboard
Real-time tracking of institutional capital entering and exiting the US Spot Bitcoin ETF market. Monitor the supply shock in action.
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Bitcoin ETF Comparisons
Side-by-side flow pages built from the same pre-generated ETF dataset.
IBIT vs FBTC
Compare IBIT and FBTC using Bitcoin ETF flows, fees, custody model, AUM context, liquidity notes, positive-flow days, and source-backed fund facts.
IBIT vs GBTC
Compare IBIT and GBTC Bitcoin ETF flows, fees, AUM context, custody, and legacy trust pressure to see whether BlackRock inflows are offsetting Grayscale outflows.
FBTC vs BITB
Compare FBTC and BITB Bitcoin ETF flows, fees, custody, AUM context, and issuer positioning to see whether Fidelity demand is joined by smaller-issuer demand.
IBIT vs FBTC vs BITB
Compare IBIT, FBTC, and BITB side by side using Bitcoin ETF flows, fees, custody, AUM context, latest flow, active days, and issuer-specific market signals.
Bitcoin ETF Issuer Profiles
Issuer-level pages from the latest ETF flow snapshot.
iShares Bitcoin Trust
Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund
Bitwise Bitcoin ETF
ARK 21Shares Bitcoin ETF
Invesco Galaxy Bitcoin ETF
Franklin Bitcoin ETF
Valkyrie Bitcoin Fund
VanEck Bitcoin Trust
WisdomTree Bitcoin Fund
Grayscale Bitcoin Trust ETF
Why Track ETF Flows?
The launch of the US Spot Bitcoin ETFs fundamentally changed the market structure of Bitcoin. For the first time, traditional finance (TradFi) institutions, retirement accounts, and sovereign wealth funds have a frictionless, regulated pipeline to allocate capital into the digital asset class.
Tracking these flows provides a live pulse on institutional sentiment. When the market sees consecutive days of heavy net inflows, it signifies sustained institutional accumulation, which often leads to supply squeezes on exchanges. Conversely, heavy outflows can signal risk-off macro environments or tactical rebalancing.
Supply Shock
Daily miner issuance is approximately 450 BTC. When ETF daily inflows exceed this number (which frequently happens), the excess demand must be met by existing holders selling, driving price discovery upwards.
OTC Exhaustion
ETF issuers usually buy from Over-The-Counter (OTC) desks to avoid market slippage. Tracking persistent inflows helps identify when OTC desks are depleted and forced to buy on the open market.
Paper vs Physical
These are *spot* ETFs, meaning the funds must hold the underlying Bitcoin. Inflows directly correlate to physical Bitcoin being locked away in institutional custody (like Coinbase Prime).
Frequently Asked Questions
What causes Bitcoin ETF outflows?
Outflows typically occur during periods of market volatility when institutional investors take profits or rebalance portfolios. In the case of GBTC, early outflows were primarily due to high management fees compared to new competitors.
How do ETF flows impact the price of Bitcoin?
ETFs buy and sell spot Bitcoin to maintain the fund's backing. Positive net inflows mean the ETF issuers must purchase actual Bitcoin on the open market or over-the-counter (OTC), creating buy pressure that can drive the price up.
Which Bitcoin ETF is the largest?
BlackRock's IBIT (iShares Bitcoin Trust) and Grayscale's GBTC are typically the largest by assets under management (AUM), though IBIT has seen the most consistent rapid accumulation since the 2024 launch.
Are these numbers updated daily?
Yes, the data is typically updated at the close of the US trading day as ETF issuers report their net asset values (NAV) and daily flow metrics.
Deep Dive Research
The Halving vs ETF Maturity
How sustained ETF accumulation disrupts the traditional 4-year cycle.
READ ANALYSIS →The Institutional Floor
Why massive ETF buying has raised the baseline "floor" price for Bitcoin permanently.
READ ANALYSIS →Macro Divergence
Understanding how traditional macro events (interest rates, CPI) now directly impact Bitcoin through ETF algos.
READ ANALYSIS →