Powered by
Crypto News

Ether ETFs Lead With $19.02 Million Inflow as Bitcoin ETFs Outflows Continue

This article was published more than a year ago. Some information may no longer be current.

On Wednesday, Feb. 18, ether ETFs experienced a net inflow of $19.02 million, primarily driven by Fidelity’s FETH, while bitcoin ETFs faced a net outflow of $71.07 million with significant withdrawals from Fidelity’s FBTC and Valkyrie’s BRRR.

WRITTEN BY
SHARE
Ether ETFs Lead With $19.02 Million Inflow as Bitcoin ETFs Outflows Continue

Ether ETFs Secured $19.02 Million Inflows While Bitcoin ETFs Saw $71.07 Million Exit

The contrasting fortunes for crypto exchange-traded funds (ETFs) extended into Wednesday, Feb. 19’s trading session. Ether ETFs attracted net inflows totaling $19.02 million with Fidelity’s FETH leading the positive trend.

The fund attracted $24.47 million in new investments and despite, Grayscale’s ETHE experiencing an outflow of $5.45 million, ether ETFs closed the day in the green.

This extended the inflow streak for ether ETFs to the 4th day with investors continuing to favor ether ETFs over bitcoin ETFs in the current market conditions.

Ether ETFs Lead With $19.02 Million Inflow as Bitcoin ETFs Outflows Continue

On the other hand, bitcoin ETFs faced a challenging day, recording a net outflow of $71.07 million. Fidelity’s FBTC bore the brunt with a substantial withdrawal of $48.39 million. Other notable outflows included Valkyrie’s BRRR at $9.27 million, Ark and 21Shares’ ARKB with $8.65 million, and Vaneck’s HODL seeing a $4.77 million exit.

Notably, no bitcoin ETFs reported inflows during this period, reflecting a cautious sentiment among bitcoin investors.

This contrasting movement between ether and bitcoin ETFs highlights the evolving trading patterns of crypto investors. Since February, ether ETFs have seen 9 days of inflow as against just 2 days of outflows.

Currently, net inflows for ether ETFs in February stand at $480.84 million while net outflows for the same period stand at just $63.41 million.

Tags in this story