U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs lost momentum at the end of April after a late-month reversal wiped out earlier inflows led by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust. What had briefly looked like a renewed institutional bid turned into a reminder that ETF-driven demand can reverse quickly when redemption pressure builds.
The shift followed several days of strong buying. IBIT accumulated roughly $1.34 billion during an eight-day inflow streak, while industry reports placed April net inflows for U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs between $2.1 billion and $2.4 billion before the drawdown. The group then recorded a collective $263 million outflow on April 29, pushing the month into negative territory.
IBIT’s Buying Streak Fades Into Month-End Pressure
IBIT carried much of April’s early ETF momentum. Flow reports showed notable daily inflows, including $269.3 million on April 9, $292 million on April 15 and $284 million on April 17.
That accumulation helped support Bitcoin’s move toward late-April highs and briefly improved market sentiment around institutional participation. One market summary published during the month noted that “all Bitcoin ETF rolling flow periods are now positive for the first time in months,” reflecting how the recovery had started to broaden across timeframes.
But the final days of the month changed the picture. The $263 million collective outflow showed how concentrated ETF activity can shift from support to pressure in a short window, especially when large share creation and redemption flows become the dominant near-term signal.
ETF Access Does Not Remove Execution Risk
Bitcoin closed at $77,747.15 on April 27, leaving it down about 11.1% year-to-date and roughly 17.1% year-on-year. The price action reflected a market still highly sensitive to institutional flow dynamics, even as ETFs continue to provide easier access for allocators.
The April reversal carries a practical lesson. ETF exposure may simplify access to Bitcoin, but it does not shield portfolios from abrupt redemption pressure, flow-driven volatility or the need for careful execution planning during stressed liquidity windows.
Profit-taking and repositioning ahead of macro releases are possible drivers of the late outflows, though the exact mix of causes remained unclear. That uncertainty will keep attention on daily ETF flow prints, share creation and redemption activity, macro catalysts and broader liquidity conditions.
The month-end reversal showed that strong cumulative inflows can be erased quickly when institutional flows turn. For Bitcoin, ETF participation remains a powerful market force, but April made clear that it can intensify volatility as easily as it can stabilize demand.
