US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $635 million in net outflows on May 13, led by BlackRock's IBIT with $285 million, signaling institutional repositioning in a.US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $635 million in net outflows on May 13, led by BlackRock's IBIT with $285 million, signaling institutional repositioning in a.

$635M Exits US Bitcoin ETFs in a Single Day—BlackRock’s IBIT Leads the Institutional Retreat

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Institutional conviction in Bitcoin took a visible hit on Tuesday, May 13, as US spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds posted $635 million in total net outflows. The figure, captured by SoSoValue and highlighted in the daily flow update, marks one of the sharper single-day exoduses from the product suite since its launch—and it was led by the industry’s biggest name.

BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) accounted for $285 million of that redemptions total. No other issuer came close. The scale is notable not just because of IBIT’s size, but because BlackRock has long been seen as the institutional on-ramp of choice, with inflows often frontrunning broader market sentiment. On May 13, that dynamic reversed sharply.

The BlackRock Effect on the Daily Flows

IBIT has functioned as a bellwether since January 2024. When it bleeds, the market pays attention. The $285 million outflow represents a sudden acceleration of selling pressure from a cohort that had been mostly accumulating through earlier bouts of sideways price action. The timing raises questions. With no major policy shift or immediate macro shock on that day, the outflows point toward portfolio rebalancing or de-risking ahead of what traders may see as a choppy period.

Other Bitcoin ETF issuers experienced redemptions as well, but the day belonged to BlackRock. The rest of the field collectively contributed the remaining $350 million in outflows. Fidelity’s FBTC and Ark’s ARKB each likely saw elevated exits, though SoSoValue’s snapshot focuses on the aggregate. For those tracking institutional positioning, the IBIT print is hard to ignore.

What the Outflows Say About Market Positioning

Spot Bitcoin ETFs have been a structural demand driver since their approval. Net outflows of this magnitude are not automatically catastrophic, but they do signal a pause in the accumulation narrative. In a market that is still digesting the legislative maneuvers around the biggest crypto bill in US history, any sign of institutional cold feet gets amplified. The May 13 data suggests that even long-term allocators are taking money off the table, or at least waiting for a better entry.

Meanwhile, on-chain development tells a different story. The most active blockchains by developer count remain busy, with Ethereum and BNB Chain leading. The disconnect between ETF flows and protocol-level building is not new, but it’s widening. Capital may be rotating into other areas of the crypto economy, including tokenized real-world assets, which crossed the $20 billion mark recently—a trend captured in the latest tokenization roundup.

Ethereum ETFs Also Feel the Pressure

The selling was not confined to Bitcoin. US spot Ethereum ETFs recorded $36.3 million in net outflows on the same day, with BlackRock’s ETHA posting the largest single-day redemption at $21.1 million. While the numbers are smaller, the direction is consistent. Ethereum products have yet to attract the same depth of institutional interest as Bitcoin funds, so even modest outflows can feel heavy.

Ethereum’s institutional narrative remains cloudy. The network’s transition to proof-of-stake and growing layer-2 activity are fundamentals that support long-term conviction, but near-term ETF flows are being driven by macro hesitation rather than protocol-level catalysts. The ETHA outflow mirrors the IBIT move in miniature—and suggests that BlackRock’s investor base is applying similar risk assessments across both assets.

Uncertainty Hangs Over Near-Term Flows

May 13’s data lands at a fragile moment. Regulatory fog, thin liquidity in spot markets, and a lack of fresh catalysts have left Bitcoin hovering without a clear directional trigger. If ETF outflows continue through the week, the market will likely test the resolve of spot buyers. A single day does not make a trend, but when the largest product bleeds nearly $300 million, it pays to watch the next few sessions closely.

What remains unclear is whether this is a one-day portfolio adjustment or the start of a broader unwind. The interplay between the pending Senate crypto bill and institutional appetite could become a major factor in the days ahead. For now, the flows from May 13 serve as a reminder that ETF liquidity works in both directions—and on this day, it worked mostly for the exits.

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