Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds experienced heavy withdrawals during Christmas week, with investors pulling hundreds of millions of dollars from US-listed products despite relatively stable Bitcoin prices.
Data shows that a combined $782 million flowed out of spot Bitcoin ETFs over the holiday period, marking one of the most pronounced short-term pullbacks since the products launched earlier this year.
The largest single-day outflow occurred on Friday, when ETFs tracking Bitcoin recorded $276 million in net redemptions.
BlackRock’s IBIT led the declines, with nearly $193 million leaving the fund in one session, while Fidelity’s FBTC saw $74 million in outflows.
Grayscale’s GBTC continued its longer-running pattern of smaller but persistent redemptions during the same period.
As a result, total net assets held across US spot Bitcoin ETFs fell to approximately $113.5 billion by the end of the week, down from levels above $120 billion earlier in December.
This decline occurred even as Bitcoin traded near the $87,000 level, showing little immediate price reaction to the ETF withdrawals.
Longest outflow streak since autumn
Friday’s withdrawals extended a negative trend that has now lasted six consecutive trading days, making it the longest stretch of ETF outflows since early autumn.
Across that six-day window, cumulative net outflows exceeded $1.1 billion, highlighting a clear pause in institutional inflows after months of strong demand.
Market participants note that holiday periods often exaggerate flow data due to thinner liquidity and reduced trading desks.
Vincent Liu, chief investment officer at Kronos Research, said the Christmas timing was a key factor behind the recent moves.
“As desks return in early January, institutional flows typically re-engage and normalize,” Liu said.
He added that Bitcoin ETF outflows during late December should not be interpreted as a structural shift in demand.
Expectations turn toward January and beyond
Looking ahead, Liu expects conditions to improve as institutions return from the holidays and capital allocation patterns reset for the new year.
He also pointed to macroeconomic factors that could become supportive for crypto-linked investment products.
“Rates markets are already pricing ~75–100 bps of cuts, pointing to easing momentum. Next, bank-led crypto infrastructure keeps scaling, reducing friction for large allocators,” Liu said.
Despite that optimism, some analysts see the recent data as part of a broader cooling trend.
Glassnode has reported that both Bitcoin and Ether ETFs have entered a sustained phase of net outflows, with the 30-day moving average of flows remaining negative since early November.
Because ETFs are widely viewed as a proxy for institutional sentiment, prolonged withdrawals may signal a period of reduced appetite for crypto exposure as overall market liquidity tightens.

