Author: Liam 'Akiba' Wright
Compiled by: TechFlow
TechFlow Insights: BlackRock's IBIT accounted for nearly 73% of the net outflows from US spot Bitcoin ETFs last week, with a single-week redemption of $1.3 billion. When this major gateway, which once brought Wall Street buying power to Bitcoin, starts operating in reverse, the bulls at the $60,000 level are no longer facing retail selling pressure but structural ETF selling pressure. The fund flows over the next few trading days will determine whether this is a clearing event or the beginning of sustained bleeding.
BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) is becoming a test that Bitcoin bulls least want to face. This ETF, which helped Bitcoin open compliant funding channels and turned 'institutional demand' into a simple narrative, is now where price-sensitive holders are making their presence felt.
Bitcoin ETF flow data from Farside Investors shows that during the trading week of June 22-26, US spot Bitcoin ETFs collectively saw a net outflow of approximately $1.789 billion. IBIT alone accounted for about $1.303 billion, close to 73% of the total weekly outflow.
The latest trading day's data makes the signal even clearer: Farside's data for June 26 shows a net outflow of $444.5 million from the ETF complex, with all negative values coming from IBIT.
This concentration changes the conditions for Bitcoin's rebound test. The ETF complex can still be a demand channel, but the largest spot Bitcoin ETF must now also be viewed as a redemption channel.
If this shell, which once helped Bitcoin gain acceptance from brokerage account investors, becomes the primary exit lane, then spot buyers outside the ETFs must absorb these exposures when ETF holders reduce their positions.
IBIT Leads ETF Fund Exodus
The reason Farside's data constitutes a market structure signal is that the pressure is concentrated on Bitcoin's most prominent ETF.


Caption: IBIT accounted for 72.9% of the total weekly outflows from US spot Bitcoin ETFs ($1.3035 billion / $1.7873 billion), data source Farside Investors.
IBIT is not just a ticker in the ETF complex. It is one of the clearest channels for Bitcoin to achieve compliant access through existing brokerage accounts. Its scale gives its fund flows more market weight than redemptions from smaller funds.
When this product contributes the majority of fund outflows in a week, the signal is no longer just 'the ETF market is cooling down.' It is a stress test on the strongest access channel Bitcoin has gained since the launch of spot ETFs.
These outflows occurred while Bitcoin itself was under pressure. CryptoSlate market data shows BTC was trading around $60,000 on June 28, with negative price changes over both 7-day and 30-day periods.
Previous CryptoSlate reports have tracked the broader context of collective ETF surrender and Bitcoin's struggle in the $58,000 to $60,000 range. The new added pressure now is that IBIT itself has become the marginal flow to watch.
Narrative Flip: The Same Channel, Operating in Both Directions
The early spot ETF story was simple: compliant channels broadened the buyer base, ETF demand reduced available supply, and Bitcoin gained a more familiar holding path for institutions and brokerage account investors.
The latest data preserves that history while revealing that the same entry point can operate in reverse when ETF holders decide to exit.
IBIT's scale is both why this week's outflow matters and provides a proportional reference. BlackRock iShares' official product page shows IBIT had net assets of $44.87 billion as of June 26, with a benchmark price around $59,813.
A $1.3 billion weekly outflow is enough to dominate the ETF complex but remains a small percentage relative to the fund's total assets. IBIT is still an important compliant Bitcoin wrapper. The market's question is what this scale means at the margin.
When IBIT was attracting capital, its scale reinforced the 'institutional demand' narrative. When IBIT is bleeding, its scale makes this outflow hard for the rest of the market to ignore.
Smaller funds can bleed continuously without altering the overall ETF narrative. IBIT cannot. Its redemptions indicate that ETF holdings may be becoming more price-sensitive near Bitcoin's support levels.
This distinction is crucial at the $60,000 level. The optimistic read: the largest redemptions have already worked through the system, outflows will slow from here, and Bitcoin reclaiming the $59,000-$62,000 range would mean the market has absorbed the selling pressure.
The cautious read: the next recovery rally must not only rebound from liquidation shocks but also withstand new ETF selling pressure.
This is the 'wall of selling pressure' version of the IBIT story. It doesn't require BlackRock to be bearish on Bitcoin or IBIT holders to exit all at once. It's a market structure argument: the largest access product can become where price-sensitive holdings surface first.
Precise Definition of the ETF Mechanism
ETF flow data is a pressure signal, not a record of direct on-chain selling.
In July 2025, the SEC approved a physical creation/redemption mechanism for crypto ETPs. IBIT's filings also show the redemption mechanism can involve cash proceeds from selling Bitcoin or Bitcoin in-kind, depending on the path used.
Therefore, ETF outflows should be seen as transmission risk, not direct evidence that for every dollar redeemed, a dollar is automatically dumped into the spot market.
The risk remains real. A large, liquid ETF can translate investors' de-risking moves into a recurring source of pressure on Bitcoin's supply side (or the expectation thereof), especially if redemptions are settled in cash or if the Bitcoin obtained from redemptions is subsequently sold.
The signal carries weight even without perfect mechanistic certainty. If IBIT continues to post large net outflow days, buyers must ask: who is absorbing these exposures when ETF holders exit?
If Bitcoin cannot reclaim $60,000 during this period, the old 'institutional demand' narrative weakens. If flows stabilize quickly, the same dataset may later be viewed as just a clearing of crowded trades.
The real test is: have ETF holdings matured into a two-way source of price pressure? Spot ETFs provided investors with a more convenient holding path. More convenient holding also means more convenient exiting.
IBIT's outflows last week placed this trade-off precisely at a fragile spot on Bitcoin's chart.
Two Scenarios
If IBIT outflows slow, Bitcoin holds the high $50,000s range, and reclaims the $59,000-$62,000 level, this week can be interpreted as a potential capitulation flush or flow reset.
In this version, the ETF holders who wanted to leave have done so, the market absorbed the transmission risk, and the largest compliant product remains a net positive for Bitcoin over a longer timeframe.
If IBIT continues to lead redemptions and Bitcoin persistently fails to re-establish a footing above $60,000, the interpretation changes. The ETF complex will define the conditions for the next recovery test: non-ETF spot buyers must hold the market on their own, without the help of the shell that once offered the simplest bullish narrative.
The IBIT-led capital withdrawal leaves Bitcoin with a live test, not a conclusion. One week of flow data cannot determine investor motives, and the redemption mechanism doesn't allow for simple 'one dollar out = one dollar spot sale' inference.
But the data does indicate that at a time when Bitcoin most needs demand from outside the ETF system, the market's most prominent Bitcoin ETF can become a primary source of outflow pressure.
For Bitcoin, the next few trading days carry unusual weight. If IBIT's bleeding slows, this week will be seen as a selling pressure exhaustion. Another round of large redemptions, and the 'wall of selling pressure' narrative becomes harder to ignore.







