Six straight days of outflows from US spot Bitcoin ETFs — totaling $1.26 billion — are drawing attention not for the losses they represent, but for what history suggests might come next.
What The Data Shows
Blockchain analytics firm Santiment says these outflows should be read as a counter-signal rather than a warning. According to the firm, ETF flows reflect retail investor behavior more than institutional positioning, which means sustained outflows tend to mark bottoms rather than the start of deeper slides.
Santiment pointed to a consistent pattern: large inflow spikes have historically landed near price tops, while heavy outflow periods have lined up with buying opportunities.

The numbers support the argument. On July 10, 2025, spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $1.18 billion in inflows — a period that coincided with a local price top. October 6, 2025 brought $1.21 billion in inflows, and prices peaked around the same time.
On the other side, $903 million in outflows hit on November 20, 2025, a moment that proved well-timed for buyers. Based on this track record, Santiment says the current outflow streak fits the same mold — retail investors cutting exposure after Bitcoin failed to hold $80,000 in May, hitting a high of $79,050 on May 16 before pulling back.
Retail Fear, Not Institutional Exit
Bitcoin was trading at $75,400 when Santiment published its report on Friday, May 22. The firm described the current climate as the highest level of market fear seen in more than 3.5 months. Rather than treating that as cause for alarm, Santiment framed it as a familiar setup — retail capitulation that has historically reset conditions ahead of recoveries.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded outflows across each of the six trading sessions from May 15 through May 22, according to Farside Investors data. The 11 funds tracked collectively posted $1.26 billion in net outflows during just five of those sessions. On May 22 alone, total net outflows came to $105 million, according to SoSoValue data, extending the outflow streak to six consecutive days.
ETF Analyst Sees Recovery Ahead
ETF analyst James Seyffart offered a separate reason for optimism. Speaking on a podcast, Seyffart noted that total Bitcoin ETF inflows are approaching their all-time high of $60 billion and that most of the $9 billion in outflows recorded between October and February has since been recouped. He expects the all-time inflow record to break in the near term.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView














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