Bitcoin ETFs pull in $238 million as Ether funds end an eight-day outflow streak and Solana products extend a ten-day run of inflows.
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Spot crypto exchange-traded funds (ETFs) saw a rebound at the end of the week, with all Bitcoin, Ether and Solana funds seeing inflows after a week of volatility and downturns.
On Friday, spot Bitcoin () ETFs attracted $238.4 million in net inflows after a wave of heavy redemptions the day before. BlackRock’s IBIT drove the turnaround with $108 million, while smaller contributions from BITB, ARKB, and BTCO helped lift sentiment. Even Grayscale’s GBTC, long pressured by outflows, added $61.5 million, to data from Farside Investors.
The recovery came after a on Thursday, the biggest outflow day in November and one of the largest single-day outflows since the products were launched in January 2024.
During the day, redemptions hit nearly every issuer, including IBIT with a loss of $355.5 million, FBTC with $190.4 million pulled, and GBTC with $199.4 million in outflows.
Related:
Ether funds snap 8-day outflow streak
After eight consecutive sessions of redemptions, Ether () ETFs broke their losing streak with $55.7 million in inflows on Friday, powered largely by Fidelity’s FETH, which brought in $95.4 million.
The reversal followed a punishing stretch from Nov. 11–20, when Ethereum funds shed a combined $1.28 billion, one of the longest and deepest red waves since their launch.
Meanwhile, Solana () ETFs continue to outperform the broader altcoin market. Since launch, the five Solana funds have gathered $510 million in net inflows, led overwhelmingly by Bitwise’s BSOL with $444 million. The group has now logged a 10-day inflow streak.
Related:
Ether traders tentatively add longs
Ether slumped sharply this week, dropping 15 percent between Wednesday and Friday and liquidating 460 million dollars in leveraged long positions.
However, despite the decline and a total drawdown of 47 percent since the August all-time high, derivatives data shows top traders . Futures funding rates have risen from four percent to six percent, indicating early signs of stabilization even though bullish demand remains weak.
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