U.S. Bitcoin spot ETFs turned from net inflows to net outflows after seven straight trading days of net inflows. On the 18th, they saw a daily outflow of $163.5 million, and on the 19th, another $51.9 million in outflows. At the same time, Bitcoin pulled back from this week’s high, at one point falling below $70,000, indicating that both capital flows and price action have weakened in tandem.
Bitcoin ETFs showed a clear inflection this week. After about $1.162 billion was attracted over seven consecutive trading days from March 9 to March 17, funding momentum reversed starting on the 18th: a single-day net outflow of $163.5 million, followed by another $51.9 million outflow on the 19th, ending the prior streak of seven consecutive red days. The market originally hoped that ETF buying would continue and provide support for Bitcoin to hold above $70,000. However, amid the Federal Reserve’s hawkish signals, rising oil prices, and increasing geopolitical risks, the direction of capital has clearly shifted toward a more cautious stance.
Based on the data, Bitcoin ETFs recorded net inflows of $199.4 million on the 16th and $199.4 million on the 17th, continuing the inflow momentum from the previous week. But on the 18th and 19th, they switched to net outflows. If calculated using the already-released figures for this week, from March 16 to March 19, over four trading days, there was still a net inflow of $183.4 million. However, in terms of trend, it has shifted from “steady accumulation” to “late-stage loss of momentum.”
By product type, the main pressure behind this weakening comes from the leading products giving back gains. On March 18, BlackRock’s IBIT had a daily outflow of $33.9 million, Fidelity’s FBTC saw outflows of $103.8 million, and Grayscale’s GBTC also recorded outflows of $18.8 million. On March 19, FBTC again saw outflows of $26 million, and BITB, ARKB, and GBTC also recorded outflows in sync. This indicates that this round of adjustment is not a brief fluctuation limited to a single product, but rather a broader cooling of institutional risk appetite.
Bitcoin: After breaking below $70,000, it still hasn’t truly stabilized According to Binance data, at the time of writing Bitcoin was around $70,756.93. Within the past 24 hours, the low briefly fell to $68,805.52 and the high reached $71,227.75. The drop over the past 24 hours was about 0.75%, and over the past 7 days it is still down slightly by 0.8%. Although the price has not yet seen the kind of急瀉-style selloff from early February, the $70,000 level has once again been tested by the market, and the prior lows have clearly broken below that integer support.
This is crucial. Due to the role of ETFs, they typically don’t directly determine the direction of price. Instead, they amplify the existing trend: when prices move upward, ETF inflows amplify market optimism; when prices weaken, ETF outflows intensify market interpretations of “institutional buying slowing down.” What makes Bitcoin’s performance this week especially worth watching is that it had just rebounded to around $74,000, and now it has fallen back to the edge of $70,000 again—effectively telling the market that while this rebound has been driven by capital, the foundation is still not solid enough.
Because ETF fund flows are ultimately lagging signals, and price is the most immediate reflection of the market’s response to the overall environment. This week’s pullback from Bitcoin’s highs is not only about ETFs turning to outflows—more importantly, the macro environment has rapidly deteriorated. After the Fed meeting, the market has been re-pricing expectations for “higher interest rates for longer,” and with the situation in the Middle East heating up and oil prices rising, investors’ appetite for risk assets has clearly shrunk. Traders have pushed expectations for U.S. rate cuts back to around the middle of 2027, which undoubtedly creates headwinds for crypto assets—assets that already depend heavily on liquidity and risk appetite.
While seven consecutive ETF red days may have temporarily created an optimistic atmosphere of “institutional capital returning,” what truly drives this week’s price is still macro variables rather than capital flows alone. When the Federal Reserve’s stance is hawkish, energy prices surge, and geopolitical risk rises, even if Bitcoin still has some ETF buying support, it is still difficult to fully break away from the global risk-asset common pricing framework. This also explains why, although the first half of this week still saw ETF inflows, Bitcoin prices were unable to effectively hold above higher ranges.
From this week’s chart, $70,000 has become a short-term line dividing bulls and bears From both technical and sentiment perspectives, the importance of $70,000 has been magnified again. It’s not only a psychological integer threshold, but also a market confidence indicator for whether this rebound can continue. According to Binance data, Bitcoin has risen by about 4.63% over the past 30 days, but it has fallen 23.64% over the past 60 days, and the decline over the past 90 days is as high as 19.75%, suggesting that the mid-term structure has not been fully repaired. In other words, this week’s price pullback is not an isolated event—it looks more like a rebound that got rejected after running into resistance within a mid-term weakness trend.