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Clash of Extremes — Structural Divergence Behind ETF Fund Reflows
In early March 2026, the crypto market presents a confusing picture: on one hand, Bitcoin fluctuates repeatedly between $66,000 and $70,000, showing overall weakness; on the other hand, institutional funds are quietly flowing back in. This divergence of “capital inflow and stagnant prices” reveals the current market’s structural characteristics.
CoinShares' latest data shows that in the week ending March 1, digital asset investment products recorded a net inflow of $1 billion, officially ending the previous five-week, $4 billion outflow trend. On the surface, this number seems to indicate that the market is bottoming out and warming up. However, a closer look at the structure of capital flows reveals a different truth.
First, the capital is extremely “top-heavy.” Bitcoin-related products attracted $880 million, accounting for over 88% of the total inflow. This means that when institutional funds return to the market, they are very cautious — only buying Bitcoin, which has the strongest consensus and highest liquidity, rather than blindly bottom-fishing across the entire market. Ethereum also saw inflows of $117 million, but relative to its market cap, it still appears weak.
More intriguingly, despite the inflows, the total assets under management (AUM) of crypto ETPs decreased from $13.04 billion to $12.77 billion. This indicates that the decline in underlying asset prices is offsetting the impact of inflowing funds — institutions are buying, but the market is still falling.
Meanwhile, retail investor funds continue to withdraw. Market maker Wintermute reports that over the past three months, the net outflow from spot Bitcoin ETFs has approached $3 billion, as retail investors shift their focus to the stock market. This “institutions supporting the floor, retail investors exiting” pattern determines that the market struggles to form upward momentum. Small dips are slowly unfolding amid this tug-of-war of capital.