
After four weeks of redemptions, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF products snap back with a $458m daily surge and renewed institutional demand.
Summary
- U.S. spot BTC ETFs pulled in $787.3m in weekly net inflows for the week ending Feb. 27, ending a four-week outflow streak that had drained ~$2.48b from the complex.
- Mar. 2 marked the first positive day of the month with $458.2m in inflows — BlackRock’s IBIT led at $263.2m, followed by Fidelity’s FBTC at $94.8m and Bitwise’s BITB at $36.4m.
- BTC trades near $67,000–$68,000 as ETF-driven accumulation resumes; U.S. funds now hold ~1.5m BTC, roughly 7% of maximum supply, reinforcing a structural institutional bid.
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs are quietly back in accumulation mode, and the tape looks more like the start of a second leg than a dead‑cat bounce. Weekly data shows Bitcoin ETF products pulling in about $787.3m in net inflows in the seven days to Feb. 27, ending a four‑week outflow streak that had drained roughly $2.48b from the complex. A single three‑day burst added around $1.02b, including a $506.5m peak day, as issuers such as BlackRock and Fidelity saw flows reverse sharply after a bruising February. For a deeper breakdown of that shift, crypto.news highlighted how “weekly Bitcoin ETFs flow remain positive with BTC back above $66K,” framing it as the first decisive sign that redemptions have been absorbed.
That turn set the stage for March’s opening jolt of demand. Fresh figures show about $458.2m in net inflows into U.S. Bitcoin ETFs on Mar. 2, marking the first positive day of the month and immediately easing fears of another protracted bleed. BlackRock’s IBIT vehicle captured roughly $263.2m, more than half of the total, while Fidelity’s FBTC drew about $94.8m and Bitwise’s BITB added around $36.4m. As one flow recap put it, “March kicked off on a positive note as investors collectively put $458.2 million into the different Bitcoin ETF products,” a sharp contrast with the $27.5m in redemptions that had closed February.
Institutional confidence returns as ETF breadth widens
For analysts, this looks less like noise and more like confirmation of a structural bid from wealth platforms and pensions. A recent crypto.news analysis noted that “Bitcoin ETFs recorded $787.31 million in net inflows for the week… ending four red weeks,” adding that it was “the first positive week since late January” and a sign that sidelined capital steps back in quickly when macro fears fade. A separate research piece on ETF adoption argued that spot products have become a “cornerstone of institutional investment strategies,” estimating that U.S. funds held around 1.5m BTC, or roughly 7% of maximum supply, by late 2025.ainvest+1
Price is starting to reflect that flow regime. Bitcoin (BTC) trades around $67,000–$68,000, up roughly 1–2% over the last 24 hours, after ranging between about $63,000 and $67,000 during the latest ETF‑driven reversal. Ethereum (ETH) is changing hands near $2,000, with 24‑hour volumes in the low tens of billions as it lags Bitcoin’s ETF story but remains tightly correlated to broader risk sentiment. Solana (SOL) sits in the mid‑$80s, little changed on the day, yet increasingly tethered to the same flows as traders position for potential multi‑asset products.

