Bitcoin ETFs just hit a six-week high in inflows, so why is the price stalling?

Bitcoin ETFs just hit a six-week high in inflows, so why is the price stalling?

Sigrid Voss
Sigrid Voss ·

I've spent the last few years watching the gap between how "retail" traders see the market and how the big institutions actually operate. Right now, we have a weird situation. Bitcoin ETFs just saw a massive $471 million in inflows, the highest we've seen in six weeks. If you're just looking at the headlines, you'd think Bitcoin should be mooning. But it isn't. The price is stagnant or even dipping. For a lot of people, this feels like a glitch in the matrix, but it's actually a great lesson in understanding institutional bitcoin buying patterns.

What's actually happening

The data is clear: the big money is moving into the ETFs. But while those funds are buying Bitcoin to back their shares, someone else is selling into that demand. In the trading world, we call this absorption.

Think of it like a giant sponge. The ETF inflows are the water being poured in, but the "sponge" (the sellers) is absorbing every single drop. These sellers could be long-term holders taking profits, miners who need to cover costs, or hedge funds closing out positions. Because the selling pressure is equal to or greater than the buying pressure from the ETFs, the price doesn't move up.

Why the price isn't following the money

Growing up during the 2008 crash, I learned that the "obvious" narrative is rarely the whole story. Back then, the banks were getting bailed out, but the people on the street were still losing everything. The "macro" story didn't match the "micro" reality.

We're seeing something similar here. Institutional buying isn't a magic button that automatically pushes the price higher. It's just one side of a trade. If the Fear & Greed Index is sitting at 33 (Fear), as it is right now, it tells me that the general market sentiment is shaky. Even if the ETFs are buying, the broader market is scared.

I also keep thinking about the CME going 24/7. When institutions have more ways to hedge and trade around the clock, the volatility changes. We're moving away from the days when a single big buy order could send Bitcoin flying. Now, the market is deeper, and it takes a lot more sustained pressure to move the needle.

Understanding institutional bitcoin buying patterns

If you want to get a handle on understanding institutional bitcoin buying patterns, you have to stop looking at inflows as "bullish" or "bearish" in a vacuum. Instead, look at them as a floor.

When $471 million flows in and the price stays flat, it means the "floor" is being built. The institutions are absorbing the sell-side pressure. In my experience, when the selling finally dries up, that built-up demand often leads to a much faster move upward because there's no one left to sell.

But we aren't there yet. With the Altcoin Season Index at 27, money is still rotating back into Bitcoin because people are terrified of their smaller bags. It's a defensive move, not necessarily an aggressive growth move.

What I'm watching next

I'm not a permabull, and I'm not ignoring the ETF data. I'm just waiting for the divergence to end. I'm watching for two things: a shift in the Fear & Greed Index back toward neutral and a drop in the volume of BTC being moved from old wallets to exchanges.

If you're trying to manage your own positions during this weird phase, I'd suggest staying away from high-leverage bets. I personally use Bybit when I need a clean interface for futures, but right now, the market is too choppy for anything other than a cautious approach.

I'll be keeping an eye on whether these inflows continue for another week. If the ETFs keep buying and the price still won't budge, the "sponge" is bigger than we thought. But if the selling stops, we might be looking at a very steep climb.

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Sigrid Voss

Sigrid Voss

暗号通貨アナリスト兼ライター。市場動向、取引戦略、ブロックチェーン技術を取り上げています。,,。


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