Key Insights
- Bitcoin ETFs recorded a $6 billion decline after peaking in October, removing a major source of steady buying.
- November and December closed with net Bitcoin ETF outflows, the first two red months since launch.
- Without renewed Bitcoin ETF inflows, the price remains range-bound and driven by short-term trading.
Bitcoin ETFs became one of the biggest reasons the Bitcoin price moved higher in 2025. A Bitcoin ETF is a product that lets investors buy Bitcoin through the stock market without holding the coin directly. When these ETFs receive money, they buy Bitcoin.
When money leaves, they sell or stop buying. Over the last two months, this demand has clearly weakened, and that change explains why the price has stopped moving higher.
Demand for Bitcoin ETFs Peaked in October
Bitcoin ETF demand was very strong earlier in 2025.
In one single month, ETFs recorded about $5.25 billion in net inflows. This means investors bought $5.25 billion worth of Bitcoin through ETFs. That buying reduced the amount of Bitcoin available in the market and supported higher prices.

This trend continued until October 2025, which marked the highest point for total Bitcoin ETF holdings.
After October, the direction changed. From the October peak near $126,000 to now, total ETF holdings have fallen by more than $6 billion. This shows that a large part of earlier demand has either left or stopped growing.

This shift matters because ETFs have become one of the biggest steady buyers of Bitcoin. When that buying slowed, the market lost a strong source of support.
Two Straight Months of Outflows Show Institutions Stepping Back
Both November 2025 and December 2025 ended with net ETF outflows. Net outflow means more money left ETFs than entered them during the month. This is important because it is the second time since Bitcoin ETFs launched that two months in a row have closed negative.
During late December, several individual days showed large outflows. On those days, ETFs sold more Bitcoin than they bought. This tells us that big investors were reducing exposure instead of adding new positions. And the weakness isn’t just restricted to Bitcoin.
Even ETH ETF flows are not in line with expectations.
This does not mean panic or fear. It shows caution. Institutions often wait for clearer conditions before buying again. Right now, they are not in a hurry.
Why Bitcoin Price Has Stalled Without ETF Support
Bitcoin price behavior matches the ETF data closely. Since mid-October, Bitcoin has tried to move higher several times. Each attempt failed to hold. Price keeps moving inside a narrow range instead of trending.
The reason is simple. ETFs provide long-term demand. Short-term traders provide quick moves. Over the last two months, most activity has come from traders, not long-term buyers. Trading can move price for a short time, but it does not create lasting direction.
The CMF, or the Chaikin Money Flow indicator, has bearishly diverged from the price. And that brings the ETF weakness on the technical chart as well.
As long as ETF demand stays weak, Bitcoin price struggles to build momentum. This is not because of selling pressure. It is because new buying is missing.
For Bitcoin to move again in a sustained way, ETF flows need to turn positive. This does not require another $5 billion month. Even small daily inflows can help price stabilize and slowly move higher.
Total ETF holdings are still about $6 billion below October levels. November and December both ended negative. Until that changes, the Bitcoin price is likely to stay range-bound and move slowly.
The key point is simple. In 2025, Bitcoin ETFs became a major driver of price. The same thing could make or break the BTC price action in 2026 as well.