Bitcoin exchange-traded funds are now logging their eighth week of uninterrupted net outflows, even as rival products tied to Solana, XRP, and the lesser-known HYPE token pulled in fresh demand. According to flow data compiled by WuBlockchain , spot Bitcoin ETFs shed $527 million for the week running June 29 through July 2. Spot Ethereum funds did not fare much better, recording $13.67 million in net redemptions over the same stretch, also their eighth losing week in a row. The divergence is not only persistent but also widening. Two months ago, altcoin ETF flows were negligible; now, they are a consistent feature of the weekly reckoning.
The numbers for Solana and XRP ETFs told a different story. They attracted $5.75 million and $17.19 million respectively. The HYPE ETF, tied to the Hyperliquid ecosystem, pulled in $4.32 million. While these inflows are nowhere near the size of the capital that left Bitcoin products, they mark a notable shift at a time when the oldest and largest crypto asset appears stuck in a holding pattern.
A rotation narrative is taking hold
For most of the year, Bitcoin ETF flows were a reasonably reliable barometer of risk appetite across the crypto spectrum. That signal is now muddy. ETF investors are not simply fleeing crypto altogether. Rather, the flow picture points to a repositioning into assets that are perceived to offer more upside or are riding specific narrative catalysts. XRP, for example, has seen renewed attention tied to payment use cases and legal developments, while Solana continues to attract developers and capital despite on-and-off network congestion concerns. Neither Solana nor XRP ETFs are close to the asset levels of their Bitcoin and Ethereum counterparts, but the direction matters. For the first time in months, the flow data suggests that crypto ETF investors are differentiating between asset classes rather than treating everything as a correlated trade.
The shift coincides with a broader altcoin renaissance visible in spot markets. Several altcoins posted massive weekly gains recently—including TON, which surged more than 80%—as documented in BlockchainReporter’s weekly gainers roundup . That performance is likely feeding into ETF flow decisions, however indirectly, as traders look for products that capture a piece of that momentum.
Regulatory headwinds keep BTC and ETH in check
Part of the weakness in the two largest crypto ETFs can be traced back to Washington. The industry has been breathing nervously ahead of a Senate vote on what many consider the most significant piece of crypto legislation in US history. In a late-stage twist, major banking interests are pushing to derail the bill just days before the scheduled vote, seeking to reopen compromises that had been tentatively agreed upon. The situation, covered in depth by BlockchainReporter , has injected fresh uncertainty into a market that had started to price in more favorable regulatory treatment.
Bitcoin and Ethereum, as the most institutionally held digital assets, are naturally more exposed to legislative risk than newer, less liquid alternatives. When regulatory clarity stalls, the needle does not move for large allocators who need that clarity before adding to positions. Altcoin ETFs, on the other hand, attract a different type of buyer—one willing to take on additional risk for a potentially asymmetric payoff. The current flow split reflects that difference in investor profile.
Institutions are still building infrastructure
It would be a mistake to interpret the persistent outflows from BTC and ETH ETFs as a retreat from the asset class by institutions. If anything, the pace of large-scale blockchain integration is accelerating. As reported recently, Bullish acquired Equiniti for $4.2 billion, Ondo Finance settled a tokenized Treasury trade with JPMorgan, and total on-chain real-world assets crossed $20 billion—all detailed in a BlockchainReporter weekly roundup . These developments suggest that the pipes are being laid even if spot ETF demand has temporarily cooled for the majors.
What the flow data ultimately shows is a market in transition. Bitcoin ETF outflows lasting two full months are not a trivial signal, but they are also not a death knell. The fact that capital is finding its way into smaller, more targeted crypto products—while macro and regulatory clouds hover—indicates that the investor base is evolving. Whether the next catalyst is a favorable Senate vote, a Federal Reserve shift, or simply a technical breakout in Bitcoin price, the pieces are in place for a rapid reversal. For now, however, the trend line for BTC and ETH funds points downward, and the market is watching to see how long that gravity can hold.