ETF data from Jan. 15 reveals a strong rebound for bitcoin ETFs after four days of successive outflows, with ether ETFs also seeing another day of inflows.
Bitcoin ETFs Halt Four Days of Outflows With $755 Million Inflow
This article was published more than a year ago. Some information may no longer be current.

Bitcoin ETFs Back in the Green After Consecutive Losses
Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) experienced a series of outflows over four days, with $1.22 billion exiting the 12 U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs. However, this trend was reversed on Wednesday, Jan. 15, with $755 million flowing into the various ETFs, according to data from Sosovalue.
A key trigger factor for the significant inflow was the Consumer Price Index (CPI) report which came in slightly lower than the forecast and speculation surrounding potential crypto policy shifts from President Trump. This saw bitcoin quickly surge back above $100,000.
Fidelity’s FBTC led the massive inflow with $463 million coming into the fund. Ark Invest’s and 21shares’ ARKB followed with $138.81 million in inflows along with $50.54 million and $31.86 million inflows for Grayscale’s GBTC and Blackrock’s IBIT.
Bitwise’s BITB and Vaneck’s HODL brought in $32.69 million and $16.98 million respectively. This significant inflow raised the total net assets to $113.64 billion, representing 5.76% of bitcoin’s total market cap.
Ether ETFs continued their positive recovery with another day of inflows. Previously, they had also experienced a four-day outflow worth $354.04 million. However, a marginal net inflow of $1.15 million on Jan. 14 was further boosted with another day of inflows worth $59.78 million.
Fidelity’s FETH saw $29.32 million flow into its fund with Blackrock’s ETHA, Grayscale’s ETH, and Vaneck’s ETHV bringing in $19.85 million, $8.09 million, and $2.53 million respectively. Other ether ETFs remained neutral with no inflows or outflows.
Currently, the nine ether ETFs collectively manage $12.25 billion in net assets, equivalent to 2.96% of ether’s market cap.















