During Christmas week, Bitcoin ETFs saw a clear slowdown as investors quietly stepped aside.
U.S. Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded about $782 million in net outflows. This was not driven by fear or bad news. Most of the movement came from holiday positioning, year end profit taking, and lower trading activity during the festive period.
Some of the largest funds felt the pressure. BlackRock’s IBIT experienced heavy withdrawals, while Fidelity’s FBTC also saw money flow out. These exits stretched across several days, showing a steady pause rather than a sudden rush for the door.
Despite this, Bitcoin remained stable. Price stayed close to the $87,000 zone, signaling that long term holders were not shaken. There was no panic selling, and spot market demand stayed firm.
Most market watchers view this as a temporary reset. Holidays often bring thin liquidity, closed desks, and cautious positioning. As normal trading resumes, ETF flows could stabilize and even turn positive again.
This move was not about weakness.
It was about timing.
Bitcoin held its ground, and the next real move may come when full market activity returns ⚡🔥🚀

