🚨 ETF Bitcoin sees capital flow reversal after 10 days of outflows After a streak of 10 consecutive outflow days that left the market worried, the spot Bitcoin ETF has just recorded a +$221 million inflow in a single day — the strongest in 2 months. Notably, this capital did not come from BlackRock’s IBIT (the largest fund), but from other funds, suggesting confidence is spreading rather than being concentrated in one place. At the same time, Glassnode reported that long-term holders have returned to net accumulation after the sell-off at the end of June. $BTC rebounded 6.5% from the $57,750 bottom to $61,600–62,000, $ETH rose for three straight sessions, and $SOL led with +17% over the week. This is a clearly positive signal: institutional money is returning at the same time long-term holders are accumulating — the two most “hard to shake” investor groups in the market aligning on the same direction. When outflows turn into inflows after a long stretch of selling, it often indicates that selling pressure is gradually running out, rather than being random. Of course, to truly confirm an uptrend, BTC still needs to reclaim the $67,000 level and then $81,000. But if this inflow persists for a few more sessions, it could be the starting point for a more solid accumulation phase. 👉 Have you all bought any yet? I’ve picked up a little BTC around the 60k zone 🚀
🚨 What is Bitcoin ETF cash flow telling us? Last June, spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a record outflow. Just IBIT (BlackRock) saw net redemptions of $239 million, while FBTC (Fidelity) pulled out another $121 million. This is a noteworthy signal because IBIT/FBTC are the two “backbone” funds representing institutional capital flows. What’s notable: this outflow happened right as BTC fell to the 21-month low (~$58,000), before bouncing back to $61–62k thanks to weak NFP data and dovish remarks from the Fed. In other words, the price has recovered, but institutional flows have not confirmed it yet—an out-of-sync between price and long-term conviction. Citigroup has also just cut its 12-month BTC price target from $112k to $82k—reflecting this cautious sentiment to some extent. Two ways to look at it: 📉 Bearish: Record ETF outflows = institutions are truly taking profits/stepping back, and the current rebound may just be a bull trap within a larger downtrend. 📈 Bullish: Outflows occur AFTER the price has already dropped significantly—often a sign that the sell-off is nearing exhaustion (capitulation). Institutional money may return when the FOMC on 29/7 provides clearer signals. 👉 In your view, are the current ETF outflows “whales backing off” or “shaking out the market before coming back in”?
Kevin Warsh believes Bitcoin has what it takes to become a store of value asset like gold: limited supply, not controlled by central banks, and cannot be printed more.
More and more major institutions are looking at $BTC from a longer-term perspective. Guys, do you think this cycle $BTC can fly much further? 🚀 #BTC
Chainlink has just teamed up with European and South Korean banking alliances to explore foreign exchange payments using stablecoins, sounds pretty legit.
Right now, it's just in the research phase, but the increasing interest from traditional banks in stablecoins is a noteworthy signal.
Do you guys think $LINK still has room to pump or is the market just taking advantage of the good news to dump? 😅 #BTC #LINK
The World Cup is here, right folks? ⚽ Will $CHZ bounce back like in previous seasons? 👀 Meanwhile, I'm still holding $ZEN , $FIL, $VIRTUAL and it's getting tough, not sure when I'll see the green again 😅 Is anyone keeping an eye on $CHZ this season or is there a better play out there?