BlackRock Bitcoin ETF

BlackRock Went From Biggest Bitcoin Seller to Biggest Buyer. Here Is What Changed.

BlackRock Bitcoin ETF
Photo: Worldspectrum / Pexels
THE NUMBER
$62.9B
BlackRock IBIT cumulative net inflows since January 2024. After a brutal 5-week selloff, the world’s largest asset manager is buying again.

Market Snapshot

Bitcoin (BTC)
$70,826
+3.9% (24h)

IBIT Holdings
774,000 BTC
~$54.8B at current price

Jan-Feb Outflows
-$4.5B
5-week historic bleed

March Inflows (wk Mar 9-13)
+$600M
IBIT = 78% of all BTC ETF inflows

The Flip: IBIT Flow History

Weekly Net Flows (approximate)
Late Jan 2026
-$900M

Early Feb 2026
-$800M

Mid Feb 2026
-$430M

Late Feb 2026
+$297M

Mar 2 2026
+$521M

Mar 9-13 2026
+$600M

Source: CoinDesk, Forbes, Investing.com. IBIT net flows, 2026

The Signal

January and February 2026 were brutal. Bitcoin ETFs bled $4.5 billion in net redemptions over five consecutive weeks, the worst sustained outflow streak in the product’s history. BlackRock’s IBIT led the retreat with $2.13 billion in redemptions as institutions hit the risk-off button hard. Then, almost exactly as Bitcoin reclaimed $70,000, the same institutional money reversed course. In the week of March 9-13 alone, IBIT pulled in $600 million in fresh capital, accounting for 78% of every dollar flowing into Bitcoin ETFs that week. BlackRock did not just stop selling. It became the dominant buyer in the entire market.

Why BlackRock’s Moves Matter More Than Anyone Else’s
BlackRock AUM $11.6 trillion
IBIT Bitcoin held ~774,000 BTC
% of BTC supply held by IBIT ~3.7%
IBIT cumulative inflows since launch $62.9 billion
IBIT share of BTC ETF inflows (Mar 9-13) 78%

When BlackRock sells, it is a risk signal. When BlackRock buys, it is a conviction signal. The same fund. The same manager. Completely opposite message.

What This Actually Means

BlackRock is not a speculative shop. It manages retirement accounts, sovereign wealth, and institutional capital with multi-year time horizons. When IBIT bleeds $2.1 billion, it is because their clients are reducing exposure, not because Larry Fink changed his mind about Bitcoin. When those same clients pile back in with $600 million in a single week, they are making a considered decision that the risk/reward has reset.

The February lows around $78,000 to $80,000 tested a lot of institutional conviction. Those who held through it, or added at those levels, now sit on significant unrealized gains as BTC pushes back through $70,000. The re-entry of this scale of institutional money has two effects: it absorbs available supply on-exchange, and it signals to other large allocators that the dip has been declared a buying opportunity by the world’s most sophisticated capital allocator.

What To Watch

  • Whether IBIT inflows sustain above $200M per week. That pace would be consistent with Bitcoin pushing toward $85K to $90K as supply tightens. A return to outflows would signal institutions are using the bounce to exit, not add.
  • BlackRock’s second Bitcoin ETF filing. IBIT 2.0, reportedly structured to offer premium access features, could bring a fresh wave of capital from clients who could not access IBIT’s original structure. More product means more demand.
  • The Strategy vs. BlackRock accumulation race. Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) holds ~674,000 BTC. BlackRock holds ~774,000 BTC. This is now a competition between corporate treasury conviction and institutional ETF demand, and both sides are accelerating.

One Stat

Bitcoin ETFs have now absorbed more than $56 billion in cumulative net inflows, surpassing what gold ETFs took in during their entire first 5 years after launch in 2004.

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