#美国贸易赤字状况 Ethereum spot ETF has been quite a topic of discussion these days. On January 8th, Eastern Time, the single-day net outflow hit $159 million, with the speed of fund withdrawal reaching a new high.
BlackRock's ETHA product alone saw a daily outflow of $108 million. It looks pretty alarming, but they have a strong foundation—total net inflow remains steady at $12.802 billion. This level of selling is just a drop in the bucket for large funds with long-term strategies.
In contrast, Grayscale's ETHE performed worse, with a single-day net outflow of $31.716 million. Even more concerning is that this product has already experienced a total net outflow of $5.131 billion, truly becoming a hot potato in the eyes of investors.
But overall, the Ethereum spot ETF's net asset value still remains steady at $18.926 billion, accounting for 5.05% of Ethereum's total market cap. The fundamental support of $12.528 billion in historical inflows hasn't been shaken, indicating that institutions still maintain a long-term allocation attitude.
The current question is, with leading ETF products experiencing large redemptions while the overall scale remains high, is this just normal short-term profit-taking volatility, or is it a warning sign for the subsequent market trend? What do you all think?
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StableGenius
· 01-11 11:22
honestly grayscale getting absolutely wrecked while blackrock just shrugs off $1.08B like its pocket change... this is exactly why institutional dominance matters. the $51.31B outflow from ETHE isn't volatility, it's a referendum
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CryptoMotivator
· 01-11 10:05
Grayscale is paving the way for what's to come. A net outflow of 5.1 billion is no small matter. BlackRock is stable, but it also depends on how things develop moving forward.
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AirdropBuffet
· 01-09 08:30
Grayscale has really taken a hit this time, with a net outflow of 5.1 billion, and it feels like they can't hold on much longer. Although BlackRock experiences larger daily outflows, they have the resources, so it's not a big concern.
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NFTArchaeologis
· 01-09 08:30
Gray scale this wave is really a bit like a "failed auction" in the antique market—once a museum's treasure suddenly falls into someone else's hands. However, BlackRock's 12.8 billion base assets are still there, which is the true reflection of collectible value.
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MysteryBoxOpener
· 01-09 08:20
Grayscale has really been hit hard this time, with a net outflow of 5.1 billion. When will it turn around...
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SmartContractDiver
· 01-09 08:18
BlackRock remains steady as ever, while Grayscale is truly trapped... However, this wave of selling feels like big players are testing the bottom.
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FlashLoanLord
· 01-09 08:05
BlackRock can still hold on this wave, but Gray Scale is indeed a bit awkward... However, short-term selling is hard to predict when it might reverse again.
#美国贸易赤字状况 Ethereum spot ETF has been quite a topic of discussion these days. On January 8th, Eastern Time, the single-day net outflow hit $159 million, with the speed of fund withdrawal reaching a new high.
BlackRock's ETHA product alone saw a daily outflow of $108 million. It looks pretty alarming, but they have a strong foundation—total net inflow remains steady at $12.802 billion. This level of selling is just a drop in the bucket for large funds with long-term strategies.
In contrast, Grayscale's ETHE performed worse, with a single-day net outflow of $31.716 million. Even more concerning is that this product has already experienced a total net outflow of $5.131 billion, truly becoming a hot potato in the eyes of investors.
But overall, the Ethereum spot ETF's net asset value still remains steady at $18.926 billion, accounting for 5.05% of Ethereum's total market cap. The fundamental support of $12.528 billion in historical inflows hasn't been shaken, indicating that institutions still maintain a long-term allocation attitude.
The current question is, with leading ETF products experiencing large redemptions while the overall scale remains high, is this just normal short-term profit-taking volatility, or is it a warning sign for the subsequent market trend? What do you all think?