- Ethereum ETFs suffered $787.6 million in outflows between September 2–5, with the largest single-day withdrawal hitting $446.8 million.
- Bitcoin ETFs recorded $250.3 million net inflows during the same period, showing investor preference for BTC amid macro uncertainty.
- Analysts cite staking restrictions and Ethereum’s “higher-beta” nature as reasons institutions are pulling back.
- Despite ETF withdrawals, whale investors increased ETH holdings by 14% over five months, suggesting long-term confidence remains.
- Ethereum ETFs and corporate reserves now hold nearly 8% of ETH’s total supply, up from 3% in April.
Ethereum ETFs Face Major Outflows
Ethereum exchange-traded funds (ETFs) experienced a sharp downturn last week, recording four consecutive days of outflows totaling $787.6 million from September 2–5. The largest single-day outflow occurred on September 5, when $446.8 million exited the market, marking one of the most severe capital flights since the launch of U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs.
Also Read: Ethereum ETFs Face Four-Day Outflow Streak as ETH Price Stalls
Grayscale’s ETHE led the exodus with $309.9 million in outflows, while Fidelity’s FETH lost $216.7 million a day earlier. Even BlackRock’s ETHA, which posted $148.8 million in inflows on September 4, reversed course with $309.9 million in withdrawals the following day.
In contrast, Bitcoin ETFs recorded net inflows of $250.3 million over the same four-day period, as investors shifted toward BTC as a safer hedge during turbulent markets.
Why Institutions Are Rotating Out of Ethereum
Analysts point to two main factors driving the retreat:
- Staking Restrictions – Unlike direct ETH ownership, U.S.-listed Ethereum ETFs cannot stake holdings, making exposure less attractive during risk-off periods.
- Macro Anxiety & Recession Fears – Weak labor data and global recession risks have pushed institutions toward Bitcoin as the “safer” play, given ETH’s reputation as a higher-beta asset.
“ETH is seen as a higher-beta play. That makes it the first target when risk appetite decreases,” noted Konstantin Anissimov, Global CEO of Currency.com.
Ethereum Whale Accumulation Tells a Different Story
Interestingly, while ETFs saw heavy outflows, Ethereum whales are ramping up their accumulation. According to Santiment, wallets holding 1,000–100,000 ETH increased their holdings by 14% over the past five months, suggesting confidence in Ethereum’s long-term fundamentals.
Ethereum ETFs and company reserves now account for 7.98% of the total ETH supply, up from just 3% in April. This sharp rise shows corporate treasuries and strategic reserves continue to back Ethereum despite short-term ETF volatility.
Ethereum vs. Bitcoin Performance
At the time of writing, Ethereum trades at $4,304, flat on the day but down 3.3% over the past week. Bitcoin, meanwhile, is outperforming, trading at $111,811 with gains of 0.5% in the last 24 hours and 2.1% over the past seven days.
The divergence highlights Ethereum’s ETF-linked headwinds compared to Bitcoin’s stronger institutional positioning.
Timing vs. Conviction
Despite the institutional exodus, many experts argue this is profit-taking and repositioning rather than a loss of confidence. Ethereum’s DeFi ecosystem, staking growth, and whale accumulation remain bullish signals.
As VALR CEO Farzam Ehsani explained, “Last week’s record outflows from Ethereum ETFs should be seen less as a vote of no confidence and more as natural repositioning.”
With fundamentals intact and nearly 8% of supply locked in ETFs and reserves, Ethereum may still be poised for long-term strength, even as short-term volatility weighs on institutional flows.