Institutional sentiment on Wall Street flipped violently this week, transforming a record-breaking start to 2026 into a chaotic exit. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have hemorrhaged over $1.1 billion in the last three trading days, effectively neutralizing the $1.17 billion in inflows recorded during the year’s first week.
The reversal creates a “net zero” reality for ETF flows year-to-date, forcing Bitcoin to defend the psychological $90,000 support level.
The Receipt: Institutional U-Turn
Data from Farside Investors and SoSoValue confirms the exodus accelerated on Thursday (Jan. 8), with funds shedding approximately $399 million in a single session. This marks the third consecutive day of heavy red candles:
- Tuesday (Jan. 6): -$243 million
- Wednesday (Jan. 7): -$486 million (Largest outflow since Nov. 2025)
- Thursday (Jan. 8): -$399 million
The selling was concentrated among the sector’s giants. BlackRock’s IBIT bled $193.3 million on Thursday, while Fidelity’s FBTC saw $120.5 million exit the fund. In contrast, WisdomTree’s BTCW managed a negligible inflow, highlighting the specific risk-off stance taken by heavyweights.
The speed of this unwinding, erasing $1.17 billion of buy-pressure in half the time it took to accumulate, suggests the early January allocation was a tactical trade, not a long-term hold.
Market Impact: $90k Under Siege
The correlation between spot flows and price action remains absolute. Bitcoin, which tapped $92,500 earlier in the week on the back of the initial inflow surge, slid to trade near $90,100 as liquidity dried up. The abrupt withdrawal of bid support has left market makers exposed, with $1.1 billion in sell pressure hitting order books in under 72 hours.
While Bitcoin struggles, the risk-off sentiment spilled into Ethereum products, which saw $159 million in outflows Thursday. Interestingly, altcoin-specific vehicles bucked the trend, with Solana and XRP ETFs recording modest net inflows, hinting at a capital rotation rather than a total market exit.