Bitcoin Spot ETFs See $91.37 Million in Daily Net Outflows, Led by BlackRock's IBIT at $233 Million

By: WEEX|2026/06/09 15:00:00
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Bitcoin Spot ETFs See $91.37 Million in Daily Net Outflows, Led by BlackRock's IBIT at $233 Million

On June 9, according to SoSoValue data, Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded total net outflows of $91.3736 million yesterday, ending the day's previous balance in net inflows. Among them, BlackRock's IBIT posted $233 million in single-day net outflows, the largest outflow among all products that day. At the same time, Ark Invest and 21Shares' ARKB saw $63.1412 million in net inflows, while Fidelity's FBTC recorded $59.3749 million in net inflows, indicating that capital did not exit the sector as a whole, but instead diverged across products from different issuers.

Looking at cumulative figures, ARKB's historical cumulative net inflows stand at $1.271 billion, FBTC at $10.452 billion, while IBIT's historical cumulative net inflows still remain as high as $62.237 billion. By SoSoValue's methodology, as of publication, total net assets of Bitcoin spot ETFs stood at $79.633 billion, accounting for 6.26% of Bitcoin's total market capitalization, while historical cumulative net inflows reached $53.849 billion. A large single-day outflow has limited impact on the overall scale, but as one of the market's most important institutional allocation channels, IBIT's capital movement remains a key focus for market observers.

This set of data also suggests that the day's ETF fund flows were not simply a case of broad-based weakness. IBIT's large outflow was partially offset by net inflows into ARKB and FBTC, ultimately leaving the overall market with a moderate net outflow. Different sources have described the figures differently, and the relevant information still awaits official confirmation. In the current RAG records, some historical entries show clear discrepancies in IBIT's outflow amount and cumulative net inflow data, so it is more appropriate to interpret this data point as a signal of single-day fund rebalancing rather than directly extrapolating it into a trend reversal.

Why It Matters

Bitcoin spot ETF fund flows remain a high-frequency indicator for tracking US institutional demand and secondary-market risk appetite. In particular, changes in creations and redemptions for leading products such as IBIT are often treated by the market as a weather vane for whether traditional capital continues to increase BTC exposure. The significance of this data lies not in the total net outflow itself, but in the fact that while the leading product saw relatively large redemptions, other major issuers still attracted offsetting inflows, showing that the market has not entered a one-way retreat.\n\nFor trading markets, this kind of divergence is usually more worth tracking than across-the-board outflows, because it is more likely to reflect capital rotating across custody channels, fees, execution efficiency, and institutional account allocation paths, rather than a broad selloff in risk assets.

WEEX View

The core question is not whether ETFs saw outflows, but whether the money leaving is exiting BTC risk exposure altogether or merely being reallocated among issuers. From the operational perspective of a top-tier CEX, this directly affects two dimensions: first, how strongly spot market depth is linked to ETF creation/redemption expectations; second, whether basis, perpetual funding rates, and large OTC rebalancing are weakening in sync. If this is merely old money rotating shares among IBIT, FBTC, and ARKB, the directional impact on both on-chain and exchange markets is usually limited. But if redemptions begin spilling over into CME, spot market making, and stablecoin settlement, liquidity discounts may show up much faster.\n\nWhat matters more in the next phase is continuity rather than a single-day reading. If IBIT continues to dominate net outflows while ARKB and FBTC see weaker offsetting inflows, that would suggest the buy-side firewall in major institutional channels is thinning. Arbitrage capital would likely cut positions first, and market makers would also become less tolerant of thinner order books. On the other hand, if flows return to net inflows over the next few days, the current move would look more like an intra-month rebalance or a large-client portfolio switch. The market should also watch fee competition among issuers, the subscription pace through institutional advisory channels, and whether BTC price volatility amplifies the negative feedback loop in ETF flows.

## Timeline

- 2026-03-28: Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded $225 million in single-day net outflows, with IBIT leading at $202 million in outflows.

- 2026-04-02: Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded $174 million in single-day net outflows, with IBIT posting $86.5222 million in outflows.

- 2026-05-19: Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded $649 million in single-day net outflows, with IBIT posting $448 million in outflows.

- 2026-06-09: Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded $91.3736 million in single-day net outflows, with IBIT posting $233 million in outflows, while ARKB and FBTC recorded net inflows on the same day.

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