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    MarketForces Africa » Cryptocurrency » BTC Falls as ETFs Post $277 Million Daily Outflow

    BTC Falls as ETFs Post $277 Million Daily Outflow

    Julius AlagbeBy Julius AlagbeMarch 7, 2026Updated:March 7, 2026 Cryptocurrency No Comments3 Mins Read
    BTC Falls as ETFs Post $277 Million Daily Outflow
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    BTC Falls as ETFs Post $277 Million Daily Outflow

    Bitcoin (BTC) fell to the $68k level on Saturday after large exchange-traded fund (ETF) outflows, reflecting renewed bearishness in the crypto market.

    BTC spot ETFs saw around $227 million of net outflows in one day, breaking a three-day streak of strong inflows and coinciding with BTC slipping back under 70,000, according to CoinMarketCap.com.

    Data compiled from US spot products show that on 5 March, Bitcoin ETFs saw roughly $227.9 million in net outflows, the worst single day since a $ 410 million exit on 12 February, according to one analysis of ETF flow data.

    One breakdown notes that the three prior sessions brought in over $1.1 billion in net inflows, including roughly $458.2 million, $225.2 million, and $461.9 million on 2 to 4 March, before the reversal on the 5th.

    On the same day, Bitcoin fell from an intraday high near $72,993 to below $70,000, a drop of about 4 per cent that aligned with the outflows. The headline is real, but it follows several big inflow days, so it is a sharp wobble in an otherwise improving flow picture rather than a regime change.

    The timing matches a macro shock. Escalating conflict around the Strait of Hormuz pushed Brent crude toward the high 80s, raised inflation fears, and hit global risk assets, including crypto.

    Reports describe this as an energy-driven risk-off move in which investors briefly shifted away from high-beta exposures like BTC, prompting both ETF redemptions and short-term holder selling into exchanges.

    At the same time, derivatives funding has skewed negative in some places, indicating traders are willing to pay to stay short, which amplifies downside risk when flows weaken.

    Despite the daily hit, aggregate spot BTC ETF assets remain at around $ 95.67 billion, according to recent estimates.

    Research looking at 14-day and 30-day ETF netflow trends finds they have turned from deeply negative earlier in the year to mildly positive or flat, signalling that distribution pressure is easing even after this outflow.

    On-chain metrics also show BTC continuing to leave exchanges over multiple days, reducing readily sellable supply and offsetting some flow-driven pressure.

    The key tell now is whether flows stay negative for several sessions or flip back to small net inflows while BTC holds key support levels in the high 60,000s.

    One large outflow day raises short-term volatility risk, but the bigger signal will be whether institutions keep redeeming next week or treat this dip as another accumulation window.

    The 227 million dollar daily outflow from Bitcoin ETFs marked a clear risk-off impulse that helped knock BTC back under 70,000, but it came after a run of strong inflows.

    With ETF assets still near record territory and medium-term netflows stabilising, the focus now shifts to whether this was a brief macro-driven shakeout or the start of a longer cooling in institutional demand.

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    Julius Alagbe
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    Julius Alagbe is a senior financial journalist and Editor at MarketForces Africa with nearly two decades of experience in finance, accounting, and economics reporting.He is one of Nigeria's most prolific financial market reporters, covering capital markets, monetary policy, corporate earnings, banking, telecoms, and macroeconomic developments across Africa.Julius has built a strong footprint reporting on Nigeria's leading corporates and financial services sector, including coverage of the Nigerian Exchange Group, Central Bank of Nigeria monetary operations, MTN Nigeria, GTCO, and major investment banking transactions.He regularly monitors the CBN’s open market operations, interbank FX markets, and equity market movements, providing readers with real-time intelligence on Nigeria’s financial landscape.His reporting draws on direct access to institutional research from firms including Moody’s Ratings, CardinalStone Securities, Fitch, and other leading African investment houses.Julius brings analytical depth and editorial rigour to every story, making complex financial data accessible to professionals, investors, and policymakers across Africa.Julius Alagbe is based in Lagos, Nigeria.

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