Bitcoin and XRP spot ETFs pulled in fresh capital on June 12, while Ethereum’s spot funds continued bleeding money.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs attracted $85.9 million in net inflows on the day, according to CoinGlass data. XRP spot ETFs added $2.04 million. Ethereum spot ETFs, meanwhile, extended a pattern of redemptions that included a $15.89 million outflow just the day before on June 11.
The numbers behind the divergence
Bitcoin had just endured a record 13-day outflow streak exceeding $4.4 billion that only ended in early June. So any positive flow day reads less like routine and more like institutional investors cautiously returning after a prolonged exit.
XRP ETFs have now accumulated $978.86 million in total net assets and $1.44 billion in cumulative inflows since launching in late 2025. That launch timing coincided with the resolution of the long-running Ripple and SEC legal battle, which cleared the regulatory fog that had hung over the token for years.
The XRP fund category also posted $7.44 million in inflows on June 9, marking a recent high point.
Ethereum’s $15.89 million outflow on June 11 preceded what appears to be another negative day on June 12. Ether spot ETFs have been dealing with significant redemptions as a broader trend, not just a one-off bad day.
Why the split matters
XRP’s steady accumulation pattern reflects deliberate allocation decisions rather than momentum trading. The token has been sitting in a range around $1.10 to $1.30, well below its previous peaks. The $1.44 billion in cumulative inflows since launch suggests these are sticky positions, not speculative bets.
BlackRock’s crypto products have played an outsized role in shaping ETF flow patterns across categories, making the firm a bellwether worth watching whenever flow data drops.
What this means for investors
For Bitcoin holders, the return to positive flows after a record outflow streak is reassuring but not conclusive. One green day doesn’t erase $4.4 billion in exits.
XRP’s $978.86 million in net assets is still modest compared to Bitcoin ETF totals, but the trajectory points upward given consistent inflow patterns even on days when the underlying asset trades far below its historical highs.
Ethereum’s persistent ETF outflows can become self-reinforcing. As fund sizes shrink, liquidity deteriorates, spreads widen, and the product becomes less attractive to the next potential buyer.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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