US spot Bitcoin ETFs have logged their longest-ever streak of net outflows. Investors yanked money out for 13 straight days — a run that smashed the prior record of roughly seven days. The cumulative total since May 15 now stands at $4.4 billion.
13 Days, $4.4 Billion
The outflow streak started in mid-May and hasn't let up. Each trading session has seen more money exit than enter the group of ETFs. The $4.4 billion figure covers the entire period from May 15 through the most recent trading day.
Previous Record Was Half as Long
Before this stretch, the longest run of consecutive net outflows was about seven days. That record stood since the ETFs debuted. The new streak more than doubles it. The pace has been steady, with no single day accounting for an outsized share of the withdrawals.
What the Streak Means
ETF flows are one of the few public windows into institutional demand for Bitcoin in the US. A 13-session outflow streak of this magnitude is unusual for a product class that often sees net inflows over longer time frames. The data doesn't show any letup yet — the outflows continued through the end of the streak.




