
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a notable sentiment shift on December 30, snapping a seven-day outflow streak that had drained more than $1.12 billion from the sector.
According to the latest daily flow data, the group collectively posted $355 million in net inflows, marking the first positive session after a prolonged period of sustained selling pressure.
The turnaround comes after a volatile stretch in late December, when nearly every major fund saw consistent red days as investors reduced exposure. The December 30 session stands out not only for the aggregate reversal, but also for how broadly inflows were distributed across issuers.
On December 30, several leading spot Bitcoin ETFs attracted fresh capital simultaneously. BlackRock’s IBIT led the group with approximately $143.7 million in inflows. Fidelity’s FBTC followed with $78.6 million, while **ARK Investand 21Shares’ ARKB added $109.6 million.
Smaller but still positive contributions came from Bitwise’s BITB at $13.9 million, VanEck’s HODL with $5.0 million, and Grayscale’s BTC product, which posted $4.3 million in inflows. Several other funds finished the day flat, showing neither material buying nor selling activity.
In contrast to the prior sessions, where losses were spread almost uniformly across issuers, the December 30 data reflects coordinated demand returning across multiple products rather than a single-fund anomaly.
The days leading up to December 30 were defined by steady withdrawals. Daily outflows frequently exceeded $150 million, with December 26 standing out as one of the heaviest single-day drawdowns. This sustained selling pushed total weekly losses past the $1 billion mark and weighed heavily on market sentiment.
The sudden flip to positive territory suggests that at least some investors viewed late-December conditions as an opportunity to re-enter, rather than continue de-risking. While one day does not establish a trend, the magnitude of the inflow contrasts sharply with the prior week’s pattern.
The accompanying fee comparison highlights the competitive landscape investors are navigating. Most spot Bitcoin ETFs now cluster between 0.19% and 0.25% in annual fees, with notable exceptions at the higher and lower ends. This narrow fee dispersion has made daily flows an increasingly important signal for gauging investor preference, especially when multiple funds offer similar exposure.
December 30’s inflows show that demand was not concentrated solely in the lowest-fee products, but spread across several major issuers, suggesting broader positioning decisions rather than pure cost-driven rotation.
The return to positive net flows does not erase the heavy losses of the previous week, but it does interrupt a clear downward streak. For now, the data points to stabilization rather than confirmation of a sustained recovery. Whether inflows persist into early January will be critical in determining if December 30 marked a true inflection point or merely a temporary pause in selling.
For the Bitcoin ETF market, the session serves as a reminder of how quickly sentiment can shift, and how closely capital flows continue to track short-term investor conviction.

