U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs saw $133.3 million in outflows on Wednesday, February 18, pushing total weekly withdrawals to $238 million. If redemptions continue through the end of the week, the funds will post their first five-week streak of outflows since March 2025.
The largest single-day withdrawal came from BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), which saw more than $84 million exit the fund. Trading volume remained below $3 billion, signaling cautious participation rather than panic-driven selling.
Since the start of the year, cumulative Bitcoin ETF outflows have reached $2.5 billion. Even so, total assets under management still stand at $83.6 billion, a figure that suggests institutional positioning is shifting rather than collapsing outright.
Solana ETFs Break Away While Bitcoin Funds Face Pressure
Ethereum ETFs recorded $41.8 million in outflows on the same day, while XRP funds saw $2.2 million leave. In contrast, Solana ETFs have now posted inflows for six consecutive trading sessions, bringing their year-to-date total to approximately $113 million.
However, momentum has cooled compared to earlier months. February inflows currently stand at $9 million, versus $105 million in January and $148 million in December 2025.
Since launching in 2025, U.S.-based Solana spot ETFs have accumulated nearly $700 million in assets under management. XRP funds, launched in November, have already surpassed $1 billion in AUM.
The divergence may point to capital rotation within crypto exposure rather than a broad institutional retreat.
Extreme Fear and the $50K Scenario
The Cryptocurrency Fear and Greed Index remains in the “extreme fear” zone, even after Bitcoin rebounded from its February low near $60,000.
Analysts at Standard Chartered warn that Bitcoin could fall toward $50,000 before recovering toward $100,000 by 2026. Meanwhile, CryptoQuant data shows Bitcoin’s short-term Sharpe ratio has reached levels that historically preceded strong rallies. According to analyst Ignacio Moreno De Vicente, similar extremes in the past were followed by sharp upward moves.
While headlines focus on outflows, the broader context suggests measured repositioning. The $2.5 billion withdrawn this year represents roughly 3% of total Bitcoin ETF assets — a notable figure, but not yet a structural breakdown.
The coming weeks will determine whether outflows accelerate into a deeper trend or stabilize as sentiment resets. For now, Bitcoin ETF markets remain under pressure — but capital is still active inside the crypto ecosystem.