Bitcoin ETFs Bleed Record $6.35B In 30 Days As BTC Stays Near $64K Crypto News

U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have posted a record $6.35 billion net outflow over the last 30 days, the heaviest rolling redemption window since the products launched.

Galaxy Research said the latest reading ranked No. 1 across all 582 rolling 30-day windows tracked for the ETF cohort. BTC traded near $63,973 at the time of writing, keeping the fund-flow record tied to the same low-$60,000 range that has dominated spot-market positioning in June.

Source: Galaxy via X
The outflow record follows a weaker stretch for regulated Bitcoin exposure. Galaxy previously tracked 13 consecutive outflow days totaling $4.33 billion, with the same period also setting record negative 7-day, 10-day and 20-day windows. The new 30-day figure shows the pressure has extended beyond a short redemption streak.

Redemptions Add Pressure To The $60K Zone

ETF outflows reflect net redemptions from fund products, not a clean one-for-one measure of immediate exchange selling. Still, a rolling $6.35 billion withdrawal shows that regulated Bitcoin demand has weakened during the same period when BTC has struggled to recover from its late-2025 highs.

Glassnode’s U.S. spot ETF flow metric tracks daily net changes across the major spot Bitcoin funds, including IBIT, FBTC, GBTC, ARKB and BITB. Negative flow windows show investors reducing exposure through ETF shares, while issuer-level results can still vary by product and by trading day.
The market has been watching the $59,000 to $60,000 area as the key downside zone. CryptoQuant data recently showed exchange inflows cooling as traders watched a possible $59,000 sweep, but ETF redemptions have kept another sell-side pressure channel active.

ETF Weakness Joins Miner And Whale Stress

The ETF record lands beside other pressure points in Bitcoin’s market structure. Mining difficulty has fallen roughly 20% from its all-time high, the steepest retreat from a record level since the 2021 China mining ban, as weaker hashprice forces higher-cost miners to unplug machines.
Large-wallet selling has also become visible. One Bitcoin whale recently sold 800 BTC at a $35 million loss after buying near much higher levels in late 2025, adding a realized-loss marker to the same support range.
Those signals do not all point to the same type of selling. ETF redemptions, miner shutdowns and whale exits hit the market through different channels. Together, they explain why Bitcoin has held near $64,000 without fully clearing the pressure around the low-$60,000 zone.

Fund Demand Becomes The Next BTC Test

The latest 30-day ETF window gives traders a clear institutional-demand gauge. A few positive sessions would not erase a $6.35 billion rolling outflow, but smaller redemptions would remove one of the largest visible drags from the market.

The confirmed picture is a record $6.35 billion rolling 30-day net outflow, the worst reading across 582 ETF windows, BTC trading near $64,000 and a market still testing whether fund redemptions slow before the $60,000 area comes back under pressure.