tl;dr
On Wednesday, a record $563 million was withdrawn from U.S.-based spot bitcoin ETFs, with Fidelity's FBTC leading the outflows, followed by GBTC, ARKB, and IBIT. Despite Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell ruling out a rate hike, investors pulled out nearly $1.2 billion from the ETFs since April ...
On Wednesday, a record $563 million was withdrawn from U.S.-based spot bitcoin ETFs, with Fidelity's FBTC leading the outflows, followed by GBTC, ARKB, and IBIT. Despite Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell ruling out a rate hike, investors pulled out nearly $1.2 billion from the ETFs since April 24.
Powell's net-dovish approach briefly boosted bitcoin, which rallied from $56,620 to $59,430 before falling back to $57,300. This occurred amidst the Fed's decision to keep the benchmark interest rate unchanged and its announcement to curtail quantitative tightening in June. Additionally, the U.S. Treasury's program to buy back government debts for the first time in over two decades impacted liquidity conditions in the bond market and influenced bitcoin's performance.
Investors dumped U.S.-based spot bitcoin (BTC) exchange-traded funds (ETFs) at the fastest pace on Wednesday, even as Federal Reserve (Fed) chairman Jerome Powell dismissed the prospect of a rate hike. The 11 ETFs saw a cumulative net outflow of $563.7 million, the largest since the funds began trading on January 11, extending a five-day losing streak, according to data source Farside Investors and CoinGlass. Investors have pulled out nearly $1.2 billion from the ETFs since April 24.
Fidelity’s FBTC spearheaded outflows on Wednesday, losing $191.1 in withdrawals. This might be alarming to bulls as FBTC and BlackRock’s IBIT consistently attracted funds in the first quarter, more than compensating for the regular large outflows from the relatively costly Grayscale ETF (GBTC).
On Wednesday, GBTC witnessed the second-largest outflow of $167.4 million, followed by ARKB’s $98.1 million and IBIT's $36.9 million. Other funds also bled money even though Powell's net-dovish approach put a floor under risk assets, including bitcoin.
The Fed on Wednesday kept the benchmark interest rate unchanged between 5.25% and 5.5% as expected. During the press conference, Powell said the economy is too strong to cut rates while pushing back against fears of renewed rate hikes or liquidity tightening stoked by recent disappointing inflation figures. The Fed also said it will significantly curtail its alternate liquidity tightening program, called quantitative tightening (QT), starting June.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Treasury announced a program to buy back billions of dollars in government debts for the first time in over two decades to improve liquidity in the bond market. Like other risk assets, bitcoin is sensitive to expected changes in liquidity conditions and witnessed a brief rally from $56,620 to $59,430 following Powell’s comments. The yield on the 10- and two-year Treasury notes fell along with the dollar index. BTC’s bounce, however, was short-lived, with bitcoin falling back to $57,300 at press time.
Early this week, Asia's first spot bitcoin and ether (ETH) ETFs debuted in Hong Kong with disappointing volumes, worsening the mood in the crypto market.
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