Bitcoin ETF Accumulation Rebounds, Helping Support Price Momentum

BTC-3,5%

Bitcoin’s exchange-traded fund story is getting a little healthier again. According to the CryptoQuant chart shared in the post, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs are still in negative territory for 2026 on a cumulative basis, but the damage from February has been trimmed sharply.

The chart suggests ETFs were roughly 42,000 BTC below their starting point near the end of February, while that deficit has improved to around 4,000 BTC below the year’s opening level. In other words, the market has seen a rebound of about 38,000 BTC in ETF accumulation over the past month, which CryptoQuant said translates to roughly $2.6 billion in fresh demand. That is not a small number, especially in a market where sentiment can turn quickly.

Timing is Important

Bitcoin is currently trading around $69,415, after hitting an intraday high of $71,950 and a low of $69,414, according to live market data. That leaves the world’s largest cryptocurrency sitting close to the same broad range it has held in recent days, even as the macro backdrop remains choppy.

Bitcoin has been hovering near $70,000 as geopolitical tensions and higher-for-longer rates keep pressure on risk assets, while Citigroup lowered its 12-month Bitcoin target to $112,000 from $143,000 and said the coin could continue to trade sideways near $70,000 if regulatory catalysts keep stalling. Meanwhile, Bitcoin slipped below $80,000 earlier this year during a broader selloff tied in part to large institutional ETF withdrawals.

The latest ETF tape shows why traders are watching these flows so closely. Farside’s daily data shows that U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs posted a strong $167.2 million net inflow on March 23, but that momentum did not hold cleanly into the following sessions. The next two days flipped negative, with a $74.5 million net outflow on March 24 and a $70.7 million net outflow on March 25.

That kind of whipsaw does not erase the improvement CryptoQuant is highlighting, but it does show that institutional appetite is still fragile rather than fully committed. The flows are there, but they are not yet steady enough to let Bitcoin break cleanly out of its range. That is why CryptoQuant’s point is important.

ETF demand has become one of the clearest institutional signals for Bitcoin, and when it is strong, it tends to feed both spot buying and broader market confidence. Reuters made a similar point in 2024, noting that much of Bitcoin’s early-year rally at the time had coincided with inflows into the newly launched U.S. spot ETFs. The current setup looks different, but the mechanism is the same.

If ETF buying keeps improving, it could help absorb sell pressure, tighten available supply, and give Bitcoin a cleaner base for another move higher. If flows fade again, though, the market may remain stuck in the same narrow band, with traders waiting for a stronger catalyst before taking the next leg up seriously.

For now, the message from the market is balanced. Bitcoin has not escaped its range, but the ETF picture is no longer as weak as it was in late February. The rebound in accumulation is enough to suggest institutional demand is still alive, and at today’s price, it represents a meaningful amount of capital chasing Bitcoin exposure. The real test is whether this recent pickup can hold long enough to turn a recovery in ETF flows into a more durable trend for the broader market.

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