Net inflows for the ten spot bitcoin ETFs combined reached $2.57 billion last week — up 15 % from the $2.24 billion worth of inflows generated the week prior — according to data from BitMEX Research and Farside Investors .
BlackRock’s IBIT continued its dominance, generating $2.48 billion in inflows. Fidelity’s FBTC came second with $717.9 million and VanEck’s HODL third with $247.8 million. However, Grayscale’s converted GBTC fund witnessed $1.25 billion in outflows, while Invesco’s BTCO also contributed $29.4 million in outflows.
Total net inflows since spot bitcoin ETF trading began on Jan. 11 now stand at just over $12 billion.
“Net inflows yesterday as the Boomers bought right into a nasty overnight 8% selloff like nobody’s business capping off a week that saw net $2.5 billion inflows and $35 billion in volume (both records),” Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said on Saturday.
Weekly trading volume for the U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs combined also hit a record $35.1 billion last week amid the volatility in bitcoin’s price action. Last week’s trading volume for the ETFs was 15% higher than the $2.24 billion registered in the prior week.
BlackRock’s IBIT ETF again led, generating a trading volume of $16.17 billion for the week. Grayscale’s GBTC and Fidelity’s FBTC generated $8.24 billion and $6.5 billion in trading volume, respectively, according to The Block’s Data Dashboard .
BlackRock’s spot bitcoin ETF is now approaching a 50% market share by trading volume, currently at 47%. Meanwhile, Grayscale’s higher-fee GBTC fund has slumped from a 50.5% market share on Jan. 11 to 23.1% as of Friday.
Cumulative trading volume for all spot bitcoin ETFs now stands at $141.7 billion .
The bitcoin price reached a fresh all-time high of $73,836 on Thursday before a sharp selloff saw the largest cryptocurrency by market cap fall over 12% to a low of $64,505 on Sunday. Bitcoin BTC +1.40% has since recovered slightly, trading for $67,718, according to The Block’s price page .
BTC/USD price chart. Image: The Block/TradingView .
The decline was also witnessed across the broader crypto market, with the GM30 index — representing the top 30 cryptocurrencies by market cap — falling 10% from a peak of 162.52 to a low of 146.52 last week. However, the index has been up considerably since late last year — currently trading at 151.85.