
BlackRock investors are showing signs of turning defensive on crypto exposure, and the latest ETF data is making that shift hard to ignore. Coin Bureau flagged the move after BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF recorded $356.64 million in outflows on January 21, marking its sixth-largest daily withdrawal since launch.
The selling did not stop there. Over the past week, total spot Bitcoin ETFs saw $1.33 billion in net outflows, making it the second-largest weekly withdrawal on record. For a market that has leaned heavily on ETF inflows as a source of spot demand, that reversal is starting to weigh on sentiment.
Bitcoin price has already felt the pressure. BTC dipped almost 6% last week and is now trading below the $88,000 level, a zone many traders had expected to act as short-term support. The timing of the price drop alongside heavy ETF selling has raised questions about whether institutional appetite is cooling, at least for now.
ETF selling matters because it directly removes a layer of steady buying that helped stabilize Bitcoin during previous pullbacks. When that demand weakens, price becomes more sensitive to macro headlines and risk-off behavior, especially in an environment where liquidity is already tightening across global markets.
⚠️ BLACKROCK INVESTORS ARE PULLING OUT OF CRYPTO!
— Coin Bureau (@coinbureau) January 26, 2026
$14T asset manager BlackRock saw $356.64M of client money leave its spot Bitcoin ETF on Jan 21.
This marks its 6th LARGEST daily outflow in history!
Last week, total spot $BTC ETFs recorded $1.33B in net outflows, the 2nd… pic.twitter.com/noc337NXJU
That sensitivity has been visible over the past few sessions, with Bitcoin reacting more sharply to bond yield movements, equity volatility, and political uncertainty. In this context, ETF outflows amplify moves that might otherwise have remained contained.
That said, ETF outflows do not automatically mean a long-term shift away from crypto. Some investors may simply be rotating capital, taking profits after strong gains, or reallocating into other asset classes amid rising bond yields and renewed macro uncertainty.
There is also the possibility that part of the selling reflects portfolio rebalancing rather than outright bearishness. Institutional investors often reduce exposure after rapid price appreciation, even when their long-term outlook remains constructive.
Still, the scale of the withdrawals makes this more than routine repositioning. BlackRock’s ETF is often viewed as a proxy for institutional sentiment, and large outflows from that product tend to ripple across the broader market.
For now, the message is clear. Institutional demand is no longer a one-way street, and Bitcoin is once again trading in an environment where confidence needs to be earned, not assumed.
Read also: Why Gold and Silver Are Exploding at the Same Time – And What It Signals for Markets
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