US spot Bitcoin ETFs added $1.9 billion in net inflows over seven consecutive days, with BlackRock leading all issuers in the latest accumulation streak.
The seven-day run of net positive flows distinguishes this stretch from a single-session spike. Sustained inflows across multiple trading days point to consistent buyer interest in spot Bitcoin ETFs rather than a one-off allocation event.
All of the capital went into US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs, the category of funds that hold actual bitcoin rather than futures contracts. The multi-day pattern suggests allocators continued adding exposure throughout the period, spreading purchases across sessions instead of front-loading on a single day.
The streak comes amid broader activity across the crypto trading landscape. Binance.US recently dropped spot trading fees to 0% for makers and 0.02% for takers, a shift that could draw additional volume into the market.
BlackRock was the top contributor to the $1.9 billion seven-day total. The firm’s iShares Bitcoin Trust has consistently ranked among the highest-volume spot Bitcoin ETFs since the category launched in the US.
Separating BlackRock’s contribution from the aggregate highlights how heavily the overall figure depends on a single issuer. When one ETF captures the bulk of inflows, it can reflect brand-driven allocation decisions as much as broad-based market conviction.
BlackRock’s dominance in this stretch reinforces a recurring pattern. The world’s largest asset manager has attracted a disproportionate share of spot Bitcoin ETF allocations, and its leadership in the latest wave underscores the concentration of institutional capital flowing through a small number of products.
Multi-day inflow streaks carry more weight than isolated large days because they reflect ongoing demand across multiple sessions. Seven consecutive days of net buying suggests the underlying driver, whether portfolio rebalancing or directional conviction, persisted beyond a single catalyst.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have become a primary channel for institutional capital entering the Bitcoin market. Each dollar of net inflow translates to actual bitcoin purchased and held by the fund, creating direct buy pressure on the underlying asset. The growth in this channel stands in contrast to more experimental corners of crypto, where prediction market platforms have faced their own growing pains.
Meanwhile, stablecoin infrastructure continues expanding in parallel with ETF demand. New stablecoin launches on emerging chains suggest that capital formation in crypto is broadening beyond Bitcoin-only vehicles.
Whether the streak extends further depends on whether allocators maintain the same pace in the sessions ahead. ETF flow data for the coming days will clarify if this was a defined allocation window or the beginning of a longer trend.
Additional source references: source document 1, source document 2.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
