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Reading: US Spot Bitcoin ETFs Post $500M Net Outflows in Q1 2026
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Coinwy > Blog > News > US Spot Bitcoin ETFs Post $500M Net Outflows in Q1 2026
News

US Spot Bitcoin ETFs Post $500M Net Outflows in Q1 2026

Thiago Alvarez
Last updated: April 1, 2026 11:46 am
Thiago Alvarez
Published: April 1, 2026
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US spot Bitcoin ETFs finished the first quarter of 2026 with about $500 million in net outflows, even though March delivered the segment’s first positive month of the year. That leaves the market with a split signal: demand returned late in the quarter, but the earlier withdrawals were still large enough to keep the full three-month period in the red.

Contents
March Rebounded, but the Quarter Still Closed NegativeWhat May Have Driven the PullbackWhy the Flow Data Still Matters for Bitcoin

Cointelegraph, citing SoSoValue, reported March net inflows of $1.32 billion, January net outflows of $1.61 billion, and February net outflows of $207 million, implying a Q1 net flow of about -$497 million. The same report said March was the first positive month of 2026 and the first positive month since October 2025.

-$497M
Implied net US spot Bitcoin ETF flow for Q1 2026.

Key Takeaway

  • $1.32 billion of March inflows did not fully offset the combined $1.61 billion January outflow and $207 million February outflow.
  • Quarter-end totals still stood near $56 billion in cumulative inflows and about $87.5 billion in assets under management.
  • Risk appetite stayed weak, with the Crypto Fear & Greed Index at 8, classified as Extreme Fear, on April 1, 2026.

March Rebounded, but the Quarter Still Closed Negative

The quarter-end picture matters because it shows momentum and scale at the same time. An implied -$497 million Q1 net flow alongside roughly $56 billion in cumulative inflows suggests institutions were reducing exposure at the margin rather than abandoning the ETF structure outright.

That reading is reinforced by the size of the market that remained in place. Cointelegraph said US spot Bitcoin ETFs still held around $87.5 billion in assets under management at quarter end, which means the products stayed systemically relevant even as flows turned negative for the period.

The main caveat is sourcing, not arithmetic. The underlying SoSoValue dashboard was not directly accessible during the research run, so the monthly flow figures are attributed to Cointelegraph’s reporting on data it said came from SoSoValue.

What May Have Driven the Pullback

One plausible explanation is that the ETF weakness reflected a broader risk-off tape rather than a product-specific shock. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index reading of 8, or Extreme Fear, on April 1, 2026 supports that interpretation, because a sentiment gauge that low usually signals defensive positioning across the market rather than isolated pressure in one venue.

That also fits the regulatory context in the brief. US spot Bitcoin ETFs were already trading before the quarter began, so the negative Q1 flow looks more like an appetite story than the kind of approval-driven repricing that can follow policy shifts such as the debate around Paul Atkins crypto safe harbor exemptions.

A second possibility is simple capital rotation. If investors saw March’s $1.32 billion rebound as tactical rather than durable, they may have preferred to wait for stronger confirmation or to redirect capital toward other crypto strategies, including the broader product expansion highlighted in coinwy’s report on Galaxy’s GalaxyOne SOL staking rollout.

The counterpoint is that the data did not show collapse. A market that can absorb an implied -$497 million quarterly flow and still finish with about $87.5 billion in ETF assets leaves room for the view that Q1 was a reset in positioning rather than a rejection of the category.

Why the Flow Data Still Matters for Bitcoin

ETF flow data matters because it is one of the cleanest public signals for institutional demand. Bulls can point to the return of positive monthly inflows in March, while bears can point to the full-quarter deficit of about -$497 million and the Fear & Greed Index at 8 as evidence that conviction had not fully recovered.

The same balance shows up in broader institutional narratives around Bitcoin exposure. Demand for BTC-linked products has not disappeared, and adjacent structures such as the proposal covered in coinwy’s piece on the New Hampshire Bitcoin bond getting a Moody’s Ba2 rating show capital markets are still experimenting around the asset, but the ETF flow numbers say that experimentation was not enough to deliver a clean first-quarter risk-on trend.

Bitcoin was trading near $68,554 with a roughly 2.73% 24-hour gain when the brief was assembled, which complicates the bearish read because spot prices were stabilizing even while the Fear & Greed Index sat at 8.

$68,554
Bitcoin spot price with a 24-hour gain of about 2.73%.

For the next quarter, the practical question is whether March was the start of a sustained reversal or just a temporary break in a cautious tape. If inflows build on the quarter-end base of roughly $56 billion in cumulative inflows and about $87.5 billion in AUM, the bull case improves; if redemptions resume while the Fear & Greed Index remains at 8, the first quarter will look more like an early warning than a one-off stumble.

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.

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ByThiago Alvarez
Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
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