Bitcoin drops $60B from market cap as investors shuffle funds into ETFs
When the SEC finally approved spot bitcoin ETFs, bullish investors anticipated a flow of new money into bitcoin. Instead, it appears that investors have been more interested in reshuffling their money.

A cursory view of trading activity in the newly-listed bitcoin ETFs could give the impression that they are quite popular. Within three days, trading volumes exceeded $10 billion — far outpacing transactions of any other ETFs launched within the last 12 months.

The reality, however, is that money has actually flowed out of bitcoin since the approvals, and bitcoin’s market capitalization has declined by over $60 billion.

As sophisticated investors who bought the rumor sold the news, most Bitcoiners simply rotated existing bitcoin investments into the ETFs.



Record trading volumes in spot bitcoin ETFs

According to Bloomberg analysis, as of this week, the combined trading volume of 500 non-bitcoin ETFs that launched during 2023 was $450 million. That compares to $1.8 billion across just 10 bitcoin ETFs.

Institutions prominently disclosed their capital rotation intentions in SEC filings. For example, Cathie Wood’s Ark Invest sold off the bitcoin futures-based BITO in order to buy its own, newly-approved spot bitcoin ETF, ARKB. All of that volume — selling one ETF to buy another — is double-counted.

Dan Morehead’s Pantera Capital disclosed weeks ago in Bitwise’s S-1 SEC filing that the firm would be buying $200 million of Bitwise’s ETF. Morehead often endorses Bitwise’s Matt Hougan on X and elsewhere. This capital infusion caused Bitwise’s ETF to top the leaderboard of spot bitcoin ETF inflows for day one. Had it not been for Morehead’s $200 million, Bitwise’s ETF would have ranked fifth.



GBTC capital rotation

Grayscale’s GBTC is by far the largest source of double-counted volume. Approximately $1.17 billion flowed out of GBTC from Thursday through Monday.

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