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Bitcoin Investors Just Pulled $2.8 Billion From ETFs In A Record 9-Day Streak

Published May 29, 2026
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Summary:
  • Investors pulled $2.8 billion from U.S. bitcoin ETFs over nine consecutive days, the longest outflow streak on record since the funds launched in January 2024.
  • Glassnode says demand is too weak to push bitcoin above $78,000, the average cost basis for recent buyers, capping every rally over the past month.
  • A stat showing long-term holders sitting on a record 15.8 million BTC looks bullish but is misleading, with roughly 900,000 of those coins parked in Coinbase cold storage rather than held by conviction buyers.

Risk assets are climbing on news that the U.S. and Iran might reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Bitcoin isn't joining the party.

Investors just pulled $2.8 billion from U.S. bitcoin ETFs - funds that hold bitcoin and trade like stocks - over nine straight days. That's the longest outflow streak on record.

A risk-on rally like this usually lifts bitcoin - but not this time.

The buyer drought

Spot bitcoin ETFs were the engine of the last two years of crypto gains. New money flowed in, funds bought bitcoin, and prices rose.

That engine has stalled.

The ETFs launched in January 2024 and pulled in over $35 billion in their first year. They became the easiest way for regular investors to own bitcoin - no wallets, no exchanges, just a brokerage account.

Glassnode, a crypto research firm, says demand is now too weak to push bitcoin back above $78,000 - the average price recent buyers paid to get in. Until new money shows up, every rally runs into the same ceiling.

The Iran news is a useful tell - stocks are climbing and oil is falling on hopes for a calmer Middle East. Crypto traders aren't biting.

That makes bitcoin's weakness look less like a macro problem and more like a crypto-specific one.

Want a daily read on what's actually moving markets - not just crypto? Join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs every morning, with a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

A record that's hiding something

There's a stat going around that sounds bullish for bitcoin. Long-term holders - investors who haven't moved their coins in over 155 days - now hold a record 15.8 million BTC.

Normally that's a strong signal. It means investors are holding, not selling.

CryptoQuant, another crypto research firm, says the record is hollow. Roughly 900,000 of those coins belong to Coinbase - mostly parked in cold storage on behalf of customers.

They crossed the long-term threshold because nobody moved them for five months. That's stillness, not conviction.

The flip side: short-term holder supply has dropped 2.2 million BTC since December. That's not because new buyers turned into committed holders.

It's because there aren't enough new buyers to count.

The bull case needs fresh demand - and right now, the chart just shows quiet.

What to watch

The key level is $78,000 - the average price recent buyers paid. A move above it would mean enough new demand to lift everyone back into profit.

Bitcoin hasn't been able to get there. Every rally over the past month has stalled before that level.

On Polymarket, a prediction market where users bet on real-world events, the odds favor bitcoin closing the month between $72,000 and $76,000. That's a holding pattern, not a recovery.

Until ETF flows turn positive, the path of least resistance is sideways.

If you want to know which signals actually matter when the market gets quiet like this, Market Briefs breaks it down every weekday in five minutes - with a 45-minute investing course thrown in as a bonus when you join.

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