Crypto markets bleed as Bitcoin ETFs hit fifth day of outflows
Crypto had the feel of a crowded theatre when someone shouts “fire”. Not everyone ran. However, enough did to make prices lurch.
US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs saw another $103.5 million of net outflows on Friday. Therefore, the run has stretched to five straight sessions of redemptions.
Since 16 January, roughly $1.72 billion has left the group. Meanwhile, BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) carried most of Friday’s damage, with $101.62 million redeemed. Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC) lost $1.95 million.
Total assets under management across the spot Bitcoin ETF complex fell to about $115.88 billion. That matters because the ETF wrapper has been crypto’s easiest on-ramp for institutions. When the ETF tide goes out, the rest of the market feels colder.
Bitcoin slipped below $90,000 and traded around $89,555, down about 0.52%. Meanwhile, traders pointed to hedge funds unwinding basis trades as yields compressed towards Treasury-like levels. When that spread shrinks, the “safe” carry starts to look like work.
Ethereum products did not get a pass. Spot Ethereum ETFs logged $41.74 million of outflows, extending a four-day run that totals roughly $611 million. Therefore, the market’s message looks simple: the big wrappers are not absorbing risk right now.
Etfs multiply amid the chaos
Yet the oddity of crypto is that the plumbing gets built fastest during the leaks. Institutions are not abandoning the space. Instead, they are changing the kind of exposure they want.
21Shares launched what it called the first Dogecoin spot ETF in the US, listed on Nasdaq. Meanwhile, ARK Invest filed for CoinDesk 20 Crypto Index ETFs. Grayscale submitted an S-1 for a BNB ETF, and Bitwise rolled out a Bitcoin-gold active ETF.
Elsewhere, tokenisation continued its slow march from concept to habit. Ondo Finance tokenised BitGo stock after BitGo’s $212.8 million IPO filing, led by CZ-backed YZi Labs.
- European banks formed a consortium for a euro-pegged stablecoin, a sign of TradFi’s steady crypto push.
- UBS weighed a Bitcoin and Ethereum trading desk entry, while Senate Republicans advanced a market bill despite travel disruption from snow.
- In Washington, talk grew of a more unified SEC-CFTC stance under a Trump era policy reset.
Solana shines with network surge and bullish forecasts
While Bitcoin wobbled, Solana kept flashing the sort of utilisation metrics that speculators like to screenshot. Network fees, transactions and user activity rose. Therefore, the pitch is back: Solana could outpace Ethereum on “activity” in the first quarter.
Some analysts set a near-term marker of $142 by late February, about 12% up from recent levels. Longer-range forecasts for 2026 ranged from $127 to $289 in bullish cases, while other models quoted €114 to €127.
Changelly put an average 2026 price near $201, while Binance projections stretched to $207 by spring. Meanwhile, the “top buys” lists rotated again, with names like BlockDAG and Hyperliquid joining SOL and ETH in trader chatter.
Nfts rebound, vc flows strong, but risks loom
Risk appetite did not vanish. It just reappeared in stranger corners.
NFT sales jumped 101% to $122.5 million, with CryptoPunks up 25%. Meanwhile, venture funding headlines stayed lively. BitGo’s $212.8 million IPO filing drew attention, while Superstate raised $82.5 million.
Market structure, though, still looks fragile. XRP threw off uneasy chart signals as funding rates flipped negative, even as Ripple executives talked up the longer game. Altcoins held at roughly $1.3 trillion in aggregate, while BNB stayed resilient despite the prospect of a Grayscale-linked ETF wrapper.
Wild cards: hacks, politics, and miners
Then come the wild cards, the ones that do not show up in a neat valuation model.
South Korea reported $48 million in seized Bitcoin lost to phishing. France’s Waltio faced a ransom demand from hackers. Meanwhile, Tennessee advanced zoning rules for crypto mining.
Mining competition also turned sharper. Bitdeer edged ahead of Marathon Digital (MARA) on hashrate while talking up an AI pivot. Therefore, miners are again selling a story that is not purely Bitcoin.
Politics kept injecting volatility. Trump sued JPMorgan for $5 billion over alleged “debanking”. His Greenland comments whipsawed risk sentiment, and policy uncertainty sat behind soft moves in Pi, XRP and ETH.
An options expiry of roughly $2.3 billion in BTC and ETH sat on the calendar, a reminder that forced positioning can arrive on schedule even when the news does not.
By the numbers
- Spot Bitcoin ETF flow (Friday): -$103.5m
- Cumulative outflows since 16 January: -$1.72bn
- IBIT flow (Friday): -$101.62m
- Spot Ethereum ETF flow (Friday): -$41.74m
- Bitcoin price: about $89,555
Key takeaways
- ETF outflows keep pressure on BTC’s spot bid, so rallies may struggle without a flow reversal.
- Basis-trade unwinds can accelerate downside when spreads compress, especially into options events.
- Solana’s activity surge is a tailwind, although it can turn quickly if fee spikes deter users.
- NFT and VC pockets look lively, yet they often behave like late-cycle risk gauges.
- Watch policy headlines and security incidents, because they can overwhelm fundamentals fast.