In the opening week of 2026, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded robust net inflows totaling approximately $1.2 billion over the first two trading days, marking a strong reversal from late-2025 outflows and signaling renewed institutional demand. This surge, led by funds like BlackRock’s IBIT, coincided with Bitcoin’s resilient price action:
0.94%
Bitcoin
BTC
Price
$91,984.20
0.94% /24h
Volume in 24h
$47.76B
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climbed nearly 7% from around $87,000 at year-start to above $93,000 by mid-week, now trading around $91,750.
This continues a trend from 2025, when Wall Street money turned Bitcoin exposure into a familiar, regulated product.

(Source: Sosovalue)
A Bitcoin ETF lets investors buy Bitcoin exposure through a regular brokerage account, just like a stock. No wallets. No private keys. The ETF provider buys and holds the Bitcoin for you.
That simplicity explains why so many investors rely on this method. In 2025 alone, U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs logged over $40.6 billion in net inflows, up 175% year over year. For pensions and advisors, this became the cleanest on-ramp.
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) led the charge. It ended 2025 with $24.7 billion in inflows and held more than 700,000 BTC by mid‑year. That’s more Bitcoin than many exchanges.
On January 6, Bitcoin spot ETFs reported a net outflow of $243 million, with only BlackRock’s IBIT showing inflows.
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Ethereum
ETH
Price
$3,214.83
0.90% /24h
Volume in 24h
$22.51B
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ETFs attracted $115 million for the third consecutive day, while
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Solana
SOL
Price
$137.84
0.19% /24h
Volume in 24h
$5.00B
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ETFs added $9.22 million.
On January 6 (ET), Bitcoin spot ETFs saw a total net outflow of $243 million, with only BlackRock’s IBIT ETF experiencing a net inflow. Ethereum spot ETFs saw a total net inflow of $115 million, marking the third consecutive day of inflows. Solana spot ETFs had a net inflow of… pic.twitter.com/a86lhBWhNB
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) January 7, 2026
Big inflows act like a steady bid under the market. ETFs buy real Bitcoin on the open market. When money flows in, supply tightens.
Think of it like a sponge soaking up coins. Long‑term holders feel less pressure from short‑term sellers. That dynamic helped push Bitcoin to new highs in late 2025 when institutional inflows hit $118 billion in a single quarter.
This also shifts behavior. Fewer forced liquidations. Fewer panic dumps. More patient capital.
Fidelity’s FBTC and Grayscale’s GBTC still hold over 200,000 BTC and 184,000 BTC, respectively, showing demand is spread across issuers.
Wall Street already treats Bitcoin ETFs as a core allocation tool. You can see that trend in recent ETF inflow streaks and in broader 2026 forecasts like Coinbase’s ETF growth outlook.
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ETFs don’t remove volatility. Bitcoin still moves fast, especially during macro shocks or rate changes. There’s also ca oncentration risk. When large funds dominate flows, sudden reversals can hit hard. Never confuse institutional interest with a straight line up.
If you’re new, dollar‑cost averaging (DCA) beats chasing random pumps. And never invest money you need for rent or groceries.
As 2026 unfolds, ETF flows will keep acting as Bitcoin’s heartbeat.
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The post Bitcoin ETFs Start 2026 Hot as $1.2B Flows Signal Big Money appeared first on 99Bitcoins.