BlackRock and other major asset managers reported a combined Ethereum ETF outflow of $75.95 million on September 22, marking one of the sector’s sharpest single-day withdrawals this quarter. The data underscores shifting investor behavior as institutional demand remains strong but increasingly tactical.
According to SoSoValue, BlackRock’s ETHA saw $15.07 million in redemptions, while Fidelity’s FETH recorded the largest withdrawal at $33.12 million. Bitwise’s ETHW lost $22.30 million, and Grayscale’s Ethereum Trust shed $5.4 million. None of the nine listed Ethereum ETFs saw any inflows during the session.
Trading volume, however, remained resilient. Ethereum ETFs generated $2.06 billion in turnover, with net assets totaling $27.52 billion, representing 5.45% of Ethereum’s market capitalization. Despite the Ethereum ETF outflow, Ethereum itself traded at $4,192.30, supported by a daily trading volume of $46.192 billion and a market capitalization of $506.155 billion.
Bitcoin ETFs mirror trend with larger outflows
The Ethereum ETF outflow coincided with heavy redemptions across Bitcoin ETFs, which posted $363.17 million in net withdrawals on the same day. Fidelity’s FBTC led the exodus with $276.68 million, followed by Ark & 21Shares with $52.30 million, and Grayscale GBTC with $24.65 million.
Trading activity in Bitcoin ETFs stayed elevated at $3.43 billion, with net assets of $148.09 billion — about 6.59% of Bitcoin’s market capitalization. Bitcoin’s price slipped 2.2% for the week, trading at $112,890, with a market cap of $2.249 trillion.
Market observers said the pattern of simultaneous withdrawals from Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs reflects portfolio repositioning rather than a loss of confidence. “Institutional participation continues to grow,” noted analysts, emphasizing that trading volumes remain robust despite net redemptions.
Institutional demand remains firm despite outflows
The Ethereum ETF outflow comes against a backdrop of strong institutional engagement in digital assets. Analysts pointed to surging trading volumes as evidence that outflows do not equate to waning interest but instead to tactical repositioning within portfolios.
WisdomTree CEO Jonathan Steinberg highlighted the structural role ETFs now play in tokenized finance: “Our investment in crypto ETFs reflects our ambition to plug directly into the rapidly growing tokenized markets.”
Similarly, Citi’s head of digital strategy, Deepak Mehra, noted that these products “align with the ambition to build more efficient, interoperable payment systems for digital assets.”
Such perspectives reinforce that while the Ethereum ETF outflow signals short-term caution, long-term institutional confidence remains intact.
Interest rate cuts fuel broader crypto engagement
Macroeconomic conditions also continue to shape ETF flows. Recent interest rate cuts have supported risk appetite, driving greater engagement with crypto ETFs even amid volatile outflow data.
BlackRock and other issuers remain central players in this dynamic, providing vehicles that channel institutional demand into both Bitcoin and Ethereum markets. While the Ethereum ETF outflow underscores repositioning, high turnover levels indicate that digital assets remain deeply embedded in institutional trading strategies.