The latest crop of spot ETF flow data delivered a sharp contrast on the first day of July: Bitcoin products registered a substantial $295 million net outflow while Ethereum funds snapped back to positive territory with $14.9 million in combined inflows. According to the original market report from SoSoValue, the divergence underscores a moment where capital is no longer flowing in only one direction across the two largest crypto assets.
The Grayscale Bitcoin Mini Trust ETF bucked the trend, recording the day’s largest single-product inflow among Bitcoin vehicles at $36.3 million. On the Ethereum side, BlackRock’s ETHA captured the top spot with a $36.6 million inflow—almost matching the Grayscale figure but within a far smaller total category inflow. That disparity highlights how concentrated the fresh Ethereum ETF demand has become around a handful of trusted issuer brands.
A Tale of Two ETF Complexes
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen aggregate net outflows in seven of the last eight sessions, a leak that market participants have linked to a mix of macro uncertainty and month-end repositioning. The $295 million July 1 figure adds to the sense that institutional holders are trimming exposure, possibly rotating into shorter-duration trades or waiting for clearer signals from the Federal Reserve. Still, the presence of a sizeable inflow into the Grayscale Mini Trust—a lower-fee product—suggests that strategic accumulators are using the dip rather than abandoning the vehicle entirely.
Ethereum ETFs, by contrast, have regained their footing. The $14.9 million net inflow may appear modest in absolute terms, but it reverses a protracted period of uneven demand that had cast doubt on whether spot Ether products could mirror Bitcoin’s early adoption. BlackRock’s ETHA continues to pull in capital at a clip that indicates both brand affinity and a growing investor thesis around Ethereum as a technology play, not just a store-of-value asset. Part of that thesis is powered by the network’s persistent lead in developer activity; Ethereum routinely tops weekly developer rankings , and that ecosystem depth matters to allocators who measure crypto exposure in multi-year timeframes.
Institutional Capital Is Getting Pickier
The flow split also reflects a maturation in how institutional money approaches digital assets. Rather than flooding into all available crypto ETFs indiscriminately, capital is now differentiating based on utility, fee structure, and perceived regulatory tailwinds. The Ethereum funds are benefiting from a narrative that ties them to real-world asset tokenization and on-chain finance infrastructure. Recent activity in the tokenization space has been anything but quiet—as seen in a wave of deals that pushed on-chain RWAs past $20 billion —and Ethereum remains the dominant settlement layer for these instruments.
For Bitcoin ETFs, the near-term headwind may be less about asset quality and more about exhausted catalysts. The spot ETF approval cycle that drove billions in fresh inflows last year has matured into a holding pattern. With no new narrative beyond the halving already priced in, flows have become more reactive to daily sentiment and liquidity conditions. That leaves room for Ether to gain incremental allocations, especially as issuers have filed for Ethereum ETF options, which could broaden the product set and attract structured product desks.
What the Data Doesn’t Yet Show
One session of divergent flows is too thin to declare a trend, but it is enough to adjust risk assumptions. The fact that Ether ETFs moved back into positive territory on a day when Bitcoin products shed nearly $300 million implies a certain independence of investor conviction across the two assets. That separation, if it holds across a full week, could alter the allocation models that wealth managers use when building crypto baskets for clients.
Regulatory noise adds another layer. With a major US crypto bill facing heated last-minute opposition from banks , the legislative calendar could directly influence how comfortably institutions expand crypto exposure beyond Bitcoin. If a stable regulatory framework emerges, Ether ETFs might attract flows that were previously parked on the sidelines, while Bitcoin products—already more deeply integrated into portfolios—could see a second wave depending on how spot price and macro conditions interact over the next few weeks.
The next flow report will be watched closely for confirmation. If Ethereum ETFs string together consecutive days of net inflows amid continued Bitcoin outflows, it would mark a structural shift in the ETF narrative that few had priced in at the start of the quarter.