Bitcoin ETF fund outflows have been over-exaggerated and are currently not enough to judge future trends.
Bitcoin ETF funding data shows a sharp contrast. Although the headline party exaggerates the coming wave of selling, the core data reveals that it is more like a technical adjustment than a long-term retreat. Only 2.5% of the assets under management of ETFs denominated in Bitcoin have outflowed, which is a very small proportion of the total fund size.
(Previous summary: Fidelity analysts: Bitcoin will be a "fallow year" in 2026, with a support range of $65,000 to $75,000)
(Background supplement: Market share dropped from 80% to 20%, what happened to Hyperliquid? )
Bitcoin ETF Funding data showed a sharp contrast, with some headlines exaggerating the coming wave of selling, but the core data revealed that it was more like a technical adjustment than a long-term retreat.
Although the current market is in a period of cyclical stress, with investors suffering unrealized losses of approximately US$100 billion, miners reducing computing power, and treasury company stock prices falling below the book value of Bitcoin, the ETF market does not show a doomsday scenario.
Checkonchain data shows that although 60% of ETF fund inflows occurred during the price increase stage, only 2.5% (approximately US$4.5 billion) of ETF asset management scale denominated in Bitcoin outflowed, which is a very small proportion of the total fund market.
The key is that these outflows coincide with a reduction in open interest in CME futures and IBIT options, confirming that it is a structural unwinding of basis or volatility trades rather than a collapse in market confidence.
Last week, capital flows showed two-way fluctuations, with net flows switching between inflows and outflows. There were no signs of runs that had fallen for several consecutive days. Trading volume fluctuations continued to fall, which was essentially a position adjustment rather than a withdrawal. Bitcoin prices also fluctuated in both directions during the same period, indicating that ETF capital flows are not the dominant factor.
The derivatives market further supports this judgment. CME futures open interest fell to US$10.94 billion from US$16 billion in early November, and risks continue to decrease.
Although the total global futures open interest is still US$59.24 billion, CME and BN each account for US$10.9 billion, which is evenly distributed, reflecting that the market is reallocating risks to different venues and instruments rather than selling across the board.
Bitcoinâs key supports
The marketâs core focus is on the three major price support levels. US$82,000 (real market average and ETF cost) is the critical point of whether the rebound can continue; US$74,500 (Strategy holding cost) tests the tension of the market narrative; if the US$70,000 mark is lost, it may trigger a full-scale bear market panic.
At the same time, the current market liquidity is uneven, which can amplify or dilute the impact of capital flows under a tense environment.
The key to judging whether the market is moving from consolidation to capitulation is to distinguish between technical outflows and true withdrawals.
Capital outflows that are synchronized with the reduction in open interest are technical adjustments; if there is a continuous large-scale capital outflow that weakens the scale of assets, and open interest is stable or increases, it is a signal for the establishment of new short positions and the selling of long positions.
At present, the market is more "shrinking" than "collapsing." In the future, we need to focus on changes in hedging positions, persistence of key price levels, and order book capacity.