Bitcoin ETF fund data shows a stark contrast, with some clickbait headlines hyping an impending sell-off, but core data reveals it is more of a technical adjustment rather than a long-term withdrawal.
Although the market is currently in a cyclical pressure phase, with investors facing losses of approximately $100 billion, miners reducing hash rates, and treasury company stock prices falling below Bitcoin's book value, the ETF market does not show signs of an apocalypse.
Checkonchain data indicates that although 60% of ETF inflows occurred during the price rise phase, the asset management scale of ETFs denominated in Bitcoin only saw an outflow of 2.5% (about $4.5 billion), which is a relatively small proportion of the total fund size.
The key point is that these outflows coincided with a reduction in open interest for CME futures and IBIT options, confirming that it is a structural unwinding of basis or volatility trades rather than a collapse in market confidence.
Last week's fund flows showed two-way volatility, with net flows switching between inflows and outflows, and no signs of a multi-day decline or a squeeze. Trading volume fluctuations continued to decline, indicating that it is essentially a position adjustment rather than a withdrawal. Bitcoin prices also fluctuated bidirectionally during the same period, suggesting that ETF fund flows are not the dominant factor.
The derivatives market further supports this judgment. CME futures open interest dropped from $16 billion in early November to $10.94 billion, indicating a continuous reduction in risk.
Although the total global futures open interest still stands at $59.24 billion, CME and BN each account for $10.9 billion, reflecting a balanced distribution. This shows that the market is reallocating risks to different venues and instruments rather than engaging in a full-scale sell-off.
The market's core focus is on three key price support levels. $82,000 (the true market average and ETF cost) is the critical point for whether the rebound can continue; $74,500 (Strategy's holding cost) tests the market's narrative tension; if the $70,000 level is breached, it may trigger a full-blown bear market panic.
At the same time, current market liquidity is uneven, and in a tense environment, it can amplify or diminish the impact of fund flows.
The key to determining whether the market is shifting from consolidation to capitulation lies in distinguishing between technical outflows and genuine withdrawals.
Outflows that coincide with a reduction in open interest are technical adjustments; if there are consecutive large-scale outflows that weaken asset size, while open interest remains stable or increases, it is a signal of new short positions being established and long positions being sold off.
Currently, the market appears to be "shrinking" rather than "collapsing." Moving forward, it is crucial to focus on changes in hedge positions, the defense of key price levels, and the order book's ability to absorb selling pressure.







