Crypto investment products experienced approximately $1.2 billion in net outflows last week, with redemptions primarily focused on US spot Bitcoin ETFs.
The week ending November 7 marked one of the heaviest print runs since late summer. Day-by-day ETF data shows the de-risking ran through most sessions before a brief midweek pause.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs were net minus $1.21 billion across the five sessions, nearly a one-for-one match with the global outflow figure tracked by CoinShares for listed digital-asset products.
The concentration in US vehicles suggests an ETF-led reset rather than a broad exit across all venues. By day, flows tallied as follows:
| Day | US spot BTC ETFs, net flow (US$ m) |
|---|---|
| Mon | -186.5 |
| Tue | -566.4 |
| Wed | -137.0 |
| Thu | +239.9 |
| Fri | -558.4 |
| Total | -1,208.4 |
Since then, daily prints turned mixed-to-positive. According to Farside, on November 10, the market registered a gain of $1.2 million, and on November 11, it posted a gain of $524.0 million across US spot Bitcoin ETFs.
CoinShares’ previous report, covering the period ending November 3, recorded $360 million in net outflows, with the US driving the majority of redemptions. Bitcoin ETPs were at a loss of $946 million, while Solana products remained positive due to US spot ETF traction.
What ETF flows and derivatives are really signaling
That sequence frames a pickup in selling pressure into last week’s tape and underlines how the US channel has been setting the weekly direction. The same regional dynamic also explained record inflows during early October when cash demand was concentrated in US funds.
Derivatives posture shifted in step with the flows. According to Coinalyze, the three-month annualized basis sat near 4–6% across major venues, compared with double-digit prints during chase phases.
Funding rates cooled, and total Bitcoin futures open interest pulled back, with CME pages showing softer interest and volumes versus recent highs. This pattern is consistent with leverage reduction and a positioning reset, rather than a forced blow-off across the term structure.
More than $1 billion in long liquidations across majors occurred during the slide, pointing to a cleanup of leveraged length rather than new structural sellers.
Breadth matters for the read-through. Of the $1.17 billion in global outflows, US spot Bitcoin ETFs accounted for essentially the entire sum at minus $1.21 billion.
When outflow weeks are ETF-heavy and basis is cool, the next move tends to be called by whether the ETF tape stabilizes first. If daily ETF prints flip back to modest positives in the $150–$300 million range, Bitcoin’s price discovery usually re-anchors as the marginal flow turns, then basis and open interest follow.
Three ways the ETF reset could flip bullish fast
The near-term map, therefore, hinges on three observable channels.
- Watch for a reset-then-rebuild path, where three consecutive green ETF sessions above about $200 million per day coincide with a basis lift back above 8–10% annualized while funding remains orderly. In that setup, open interest should rebuild gradually on CME and offshore venues. That configuration typically aligns with cash-led demand, not a leverage chase.
- Extend the caution case if CoinShares records another week of over $1 billion in outflows and the ETF tape shows four or five consecutive red sessions, with basis compressing toward 0–3% and open interest bleeding lower. That would keep passive redemption pressure in play and extend a time correction.
- Maintain a tail scenario for a reflexive snap-back, where a single large positive ETF day above approximately $750 million flips the weekly ledger to net inflows and basis jumps above 12–15%. In that case, watch funding closely to avoid late-cycle leverage.
The sequencing tends to follow a familiar cadence. Monday brings the CoinShares snapshot of the prior week, while daily ETF flow prints update the marginal cash signal by the close of each session. Additionally, the term structure of derivatives and open interest adjust as risk is added or removed.
How the ETF-led reset could shape Bitcoin’s next move
According to CoinShares’ methodology notes, the flows series captures listed ETP and ETF vehicles, not off-exchange wallet rotation. Therefore, last week’s minus $1.2 billion should be understood as ETF-dominated activity rather than capitulation by spot holders.
Basis and funding are state variables; levels around 4–6% annualized imply reduced leverage, which historically precedes more durable advances when cash demand returns.
Cross-market context remains aligned with the flow read. The US has driven the fastest turns both up and down since October, consistent with the outsized footprint of spot Bitcoin ETFs in setting weekly direction.
None of the indicators mentioned, in isolation, establishes a new trend. Taken together, they frame a risk reset that leaves scope for rebuild if and when ETF inflows resume.
For traders and allocators mapping the next two to four weeks, the practical triggers are straightforward. Track the Farside daily tape for a three-day green streak above $200 million per day and watch the three-month basis reapproach 8–10% while funding stays contained.
Additionally, monitor a gradual increase in open interest on the CME, alongside offshore venues. In the negative case, exercise caution if CoinShares records another week with a deficit of $1 billion, with the basis pinned near flat and open interest fading.
In the fast-rebound case, a single, very large positive ETF day would likely appear first, with the term structure steepening and open interest following.
The immediate takeaway from the latest print is that the outflow week was driven by ETFs, not a market-wide unwind. That keeps the focus squarely on the US ETF tape to call the turn, with basis and open interest as confirmation.
Solana and XRP products were relative pockets of resilience even as Bitcoin and Ether products led redemptions. The asset-level split will be clarified in the next Monday update.
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