The U.S. Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) saw net inflows the day after Christmas, preventing over $1.5 billion in outflows over four consecutive trading days.

On December 26, the total net inflow for these 11 ETFs was $475.2 million, with $254.4 million flowing into Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC), according to CoinGlass.

Following closely is the ARK 21Shares Bitcoin ETF (ARKB), with inflows of $186.9 million, while BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) saw net inflows of $56.5 million.

Grayscale's mini Bitcoin ETF and VanEck's ETF also received moderate inflows of $7.2 million and $2.7 million, respectively.

Due to the U.S. stock market being closed on Christmas Day, these ETFs experienced net outflows totaling $1.52 billion over four consecutive trading days from December 19 to December 24.

On December 24, IBIT experienced its largest single-day net outflow ever, reaching $188.7 million, more than double the $72.7 million record set on December 20.

Bitcoin (BTC) fell 2.2% in the past day, dropping from around $98,000 to just above $96,000.

CoinGlass shows that Ether ETF has achieved net inflows for the third consecutive trading day, totaling $301.6 million.

On December 26, the ETH fund saw net inflows of $117.2 million, with Fidelity ETF leading again with net inflows of $83 million.

BlackRock's iShares Ethereum Trust ETF (ETHA) followed closely with $28.2 million in inflows, while Grayscale's ETH Trust attracted $6 million.

ETH fell 1.7% in the past day, dropping below $3,400. Over the past two months, ETH has underperformed compared to Bitcoin, failing to reach new all-time highs, unlike the market leader.

Unlike the 24-hour continuous assets tracked by cryptocurrency ETFs, these funds have only three trading days left this year—December 27, 30, and 31.

In its first year, the Bitcoin ETF has recorded a total net inflow of $35.94 billion, with total assets under management (AUM) of $111.87 billion.

Meanwhile, Ether ETF saw net inflows of $2.63 billion for the year, with assets under management of approximately $12 billion.