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Why is the change in Bitcoin ETF funds still insufficient to determine market trends?
Bitcoin ETF funding data shows a stark contrast; some clickbait articles sensationalize a wave of selling, but the core data reveals more of a technical adjustment rather than a long-term withdrawal.
Although the current market is in a cyclical pressure stage, investors have not realized losses of about $100 billion, miners are reducing their hash rate, and the stock prices of treasury companies are below the book value of Bitcoin, the ETF market has not shown signs of an apocalypse.
Checkonchain data shows that although 60% of ETF capital inflows occurred during price increases, the ETF assets under management denominated in Bitcoin only experienced a 2.5% outflow (approximately $4.5 billion), which is relatively small compared to the total fund size.
The key point is that the outflow of these funds coincides with the reduction of open interest in CME futures and IBIT options, confirming that it is a structural liquidation of basis or volatility trading, rather than a collapse of market confidence.
Last week, the capital flow showed two-way fluctuations, with net flow switching between inflows and outflows, and there were no signs of a continuous multi-day decline or a run on funds. The trading volume continued to decline, which is essentially a position adjustment rather than an exit. The price of Bitcoin also fluctuated in both directions during the same period, indicating that ETF capital flow is not the dominant factor.
The derivatives market further supports this judgment, as CME futures open interest has decreased from $16 billion at the beginning of November to $10.94 billion, with risk continuing to decline.
The total open interest in global futures is still $59.24 billion, but CME and BN each account for $10.9 billion, which is distributed evenly, reflecting that the market is reallocating risk to different venues and instruments rather than engaging in wholesale dumping.
The core focus of the market is concentrated on three major price support levels. $82,000 (the actual market average and ETF cost) is the critical point for whether the rebound can continue; $74,500 (Strategy's holding cost) tests the narrative tension in the market; if the $70,000 level is lost, it could trigger a full-blown bear market panic.
At the same time, the current market liquidity is uneven, and in a tight environment, it can amplify or diminish the impact of capital flows.
The key to determining whether the market has shifted from consolidation to capitulation lies in distinguishing between technical outflows and real withdrawals.
The outflow of funds synchronized with the reduction of open contracts is a technical adjustment; if there is a continuous large-scale outflow of funds that weakens asset size, while the open contracts remain stable or increase, it is a signal for new short positions to be established and long positions to be sold.
Currently, the market appears to be more “shrinking” than “collapsing”. We need to pay close attention to changes in hedging positions, the maintenance of key price levels, and the ability to absorb order books.