Spot Bitcoin ETFs Post $74.53M Net Outflow on March 24 | TokenTopNews

U.S. spot Bitcoin  BTC +0.00% ETFs recorded a total net outflow of $74.53 million on March 24 (ET), snapping a prior stretch of institutional inflows. Spot Ethereum  ETH +0.00% ETFs also posted net outflows on the same day, extending a losing streak that has weighed on the ETH product lineup through late March 2026.

Spot Bitcoin ETFs — Net Flow
‑$74.53M
March 24, 2026  •  Total across all U.S. spot BTC ETFs

Bitcoin ETFs Shed $74.53M on March 24

The combined net outflow of $74.53 million across all U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF products marked a notable pullback in institutional demand. The figure covers all 11 spot Bitcoin ETFs trading on U.S. exchanges, including BlackRock’s IBIT, Fidelity’s FBTC, Grayscale’s GBTC, and ARK 21Shares’ ARKB.

Daily ETF flow data, tracked by platforms such as CoinGlass and SoSoValue, has become a key institutional sentiment gauge since the spot Bitcoin ETF suite launched in January 2024. Outflow days do not necessarily signal sustained selling, but they reflect reduced net new allocations on a given trading session.

Individual fund-level breakdowns for March 24 were not fully available at the time of reporting. Historically, GBTC has been the largest single source of outflows on negative-flow days due to ongoing fee-driven rotation, while IBIT and FBTC have typically led on inflow days.

Market Signal — March 24
Spot BTC ETFs logged a net outflow day
Combined outflow: $74.53 million, a reversal from recent inflow streaks, signaling short-term institutional caution.

Ethereum ETFs Also in Outflow Territory on March 24

Spot Ethereum ETFs mirrored the Bitcoin products with net outflows on March 24. The original data from SoSoValue indicated a negative flow figure for the ETH ETF suite, though the precise total was not fully confirmed at publication.

The ETH outflows continued a pattern that has persisted through much of March 2026. Ethereum ETF products, including BlackRock’s ETHA, Fidelity’s FETH, and Grayscale’s ETHE, have struggled to attract consistent inflows compared to their Bitcoin counterparts since launching in mid-2024.

The gap between Bitcoin and Ethereum ETF demand reflects broader market dynamics. Bitcoin’s dominance in the institutional allocation narrative has kept BTC products as the primary vehicle for crypto ETF flows, while ETH products have seen more sporadic interest.

Where ETF Flows Stand After March 24

The March 24 outflow appears to have been a single-session dip rather than the start of a sustained trend. By March 25, spot Bitcoin ETFs rebounded with approximately $167 million in net inflows, suggesting the prior day’s pullback was short-lived.

This pattern of isolated outflow days followed by quick recoveries has been a recurring feature of the spot Bitcoin ETF market in 2026. The products have accumulated tens of billions in cumulative net inflows since their January 2024 launch, and single-day outflows in the $50M to $100M range have typically reversed within one to two trading sessions.

For Ethereum ETFs, the picture is less encouraging. ETH products have logged more frequent outflow days and smaller average inflow amounts, a trend that persisted even as Bitcoin ETFs recovered on March 25.

Traders monitoring daily ETF flows as an institutional sentiment indicator should note that single-day figures can be volatile. Weekly and monthly net flow totals provide a more reliable signal of sustained demand shifts. The March 24 Bitcoin outflow of $74.53 million, while notable, represented a small fraction of the total assets held across all U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF products.

The next key data point will be whether the March 25 inflow recovery extends into a multi-day streak or whether flows turn negative again as the month closes out.

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.

Otto Bergmanr

Otte Bergmar is a crypto journalist covering Scandinavian and European blockchain markets, with a focus on decentralisation, privacy, and the AI–crypto interface. He reports on Web3 startups, market structure, and EU policy; from licensing regimes to consumer protection and cross-border compliance. At TokenTopNews, Otte transforms policy drafts, regulatory disclosures, and on-chain data into actionable, decision-ready insights, helping readers understand how regulation influences blockchain adoption across Europe.