Two things are true about Bitcoin ETFs right now. They have never been traded more, and money is leaving them.
Both are happening at the same time. That is the strange part.
The Milestone
A spot Bitcoin ETF is a fund that holds real bitcoin and trades like a stock. So you can buy it in a normal brokerage account.
These funds let you own bitcoin without a crypto wallet. You buy a share, and the fund holds the coin for you.
They are about to cross $2 trillion in lifetime trading volume. They hit $1.99 trillion as of June 11, less than two and a half years after they launched.
Trading volume just measures how much gets bought and sold. It does not mean that much money is staying inside the funds.
Still, the scale is huge. It puts Bitcoin ETFs next to some of the most heavily traded funds on the planet.
That list includes the Vanguard S&P 500 fund and the Nasdaq-100 fund known as QQQ. Those are household names in the fund world.
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How It Got Here
The climb was fast. The funds passed $100 billion in trades by March 2024.
They cleared $500 billion after Trump won the 2024 election. They hit $1 trillion about a year ago.
Now they are knocking on $2 trillion. That second trillion took only about a year to pile up.
That pace is rare for any fund. A crypto product almost never grows this fast.
Other coins are far behind. Ethereum funds have done $466 billion in trades, and Solana and XRP funds are barely a rounding error next to bitcoin.
Bitcoin still rules this space. The other coins are still tiny by comparison.
One Fund Runs The Show
The trading is not spread evenly. BlackRock's IBIT now handles 73.7% of all the volume in these funds.
At launch it had about 22% of the action. Now it holds roughly $49 billion of the $76 billion spread across every U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF.
IBIT alone has pulled in $62 billion since launch. No other fund is close.
In short, one fund became the front door for almost everyone buying bitcoin this way.
Money Is Actually Leaving
Here is the catch behind the milestone. Investors have been pulling cash out.
The funds have lost $7.6 billion since bitcoin hit its record near $126,000 in October. They are down $3 billion just this year.
Heavy trading with money walking out the door usually points to nervous owners, not eager buyers.
The pullback tracks bitcoin's slide from its October peak. When prices fall, some owners head for the door.
Worth Noting
The funds have still taken in $53.9 billion since they opened. So the long-term picture is far from broken.
A record on the scoreboard and money heading for the exits rarely show up together. Right now, they do.
That split is the real story to watch. Strong trading does not always mean strong demand.
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