Bitcoin is cementing its position as the premier institutional digital asset, with spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds pulling in $211.74 million on May 23, 2025 alone. The staggering single-day inflow pushes cumulative Bitcoin ETF inflows past $44.5 billion since the funds launched in January 2024, underscoring Wall Street’s accelerating appetite for exposure to the world’s largest cryptocurrency.
TL;DR
- Spot Bitcoin ETFs attracted $211.74 million on May 23, bringing total cumulative inflows to $44.53 billion
- BlackRock’s IBIT led all U.S. ETFs with $430.77 million in daily inflows, outpacing every other fund category
- Bitcoin trades at $107,287, consolidating after hitting an all-time high of $111,944 earlier in the week
- Combined crypto ETF inflows (BTC + ETH) reached $270.37 million for the day
- U.S. Bitcoin ETFs now hold approximately $131.39 billion in BTC, representing 6.11% of Bitcoin’s total market capitalization
BlackRock’s IBIT: The Undisputed ETF King
The numbers tell a clear story. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) didn’t just lead crypto ETFs on May 23 — it led all U.S.-based exchange-traded funds. The fund pulled in $430.77 million in a single trading session, a figure that puts it ahead of every equity, bond, and commodity ETF on the market. For context, IBIT’s cumulative assets now position BlackRock as the second-largest holder of Bitcoin globally, trailing only the pseudonymous creator Satoshi Nakamoto.
This isn’t speculative retail money chasing momentum. The inflow pattern points squarely to institutional allocation — pension funds, endowments, and registered investment advisors building systematic Bitcoin exposure into portfolios that previously had none. The low Google Trends search interest for Bitcoin, combined with a Crypto Fear & Greed Index reading of 73, confirms that this rally is being driven by sophisticated capital rather than hype-fueled retail buying.
A Tale of Two ETF Markets
While IBIT dominated, the broader ETF landscape reveals interesting nuance. Several prominent funds actually recorded outflows on the same day. Grayscale’s GBTC shed $89.17 million, Fidelity’s FBTC lost $73.69 million, and Ark Invest’s ARKB saw $73.89 million in exits. VanEck’s HODL posted modest gains of $17.72 million, while funds from Bitwise, Valkyrie, and Grayscale’s Mini Bitcoin trust recorded flat activity.
The pattern is unmistakable: institutional capital is consolidating around BlackRock’s offering, drawn by its superior liquidity, tight bid-ask spreads, and the brand trust that comes with the world’s largest asset manager. This concentration effect mirrors what happened in the early days of equity index funds, where a dominant provider eventually captured the lion’s share of flows.
Ethereum ETFs Ride the Coattails
The spot Ethereum ETF market also posted healthy numbers, with $58.63 million in combined daily inflows. BlackRock’s ETHA led the way with $52.84 million, while Grayscale’s Mini Ethereum fund added $5.79 million. Total Ethereum ETF net inflows now stand at $2.76 billion since the funds began trading in July 2024. Ethereum trades at $2,526, consolidating after a week that saw it briefly touch $2,664 amid growing optimism following the Pectra network upgrade.
Bitcoin Pizza Day: From $41 to $1.1 Billion
May 23 also carried symbolic weight, falling one day after Bitcoin Pizza Day — the annual commemoration of Laszlo Hanyecz’s legendary 10,000 BTC pizza purchase in 2010. At current prices, those two pizzas would be worth approximately $1.1 billion. The irony wasn’t lost on the market: Bitcoin’s surge past $111,000 earlier in the week, briefly surpassing Amazon’s market capitalization at $2.205 trillion, represents a full-circle moment for an asset that was once dismissed as an internet novelty.
Options Expiry Adds Complexity
May 23 also marked a significant options expiry date, with 25,000 Bitcoin options and 202,000 Ethereum options set to expire. The maximum pain price for Bitcoin options sat at $104,000, below the current spot price, suggesting that bullish positioning dominated the options market. The expiry event passed without major disruption, a sign that the market’s structural maturity continues to improve.
Why This Matters
The $44.5 billion in cumulative Bitcoin ETF inflows isn’t just a number — it represents a fundamental shift in how traditional finance interacts with digital assets. When BlackRock’s IBIT tops all U.S. ETF inflows on a given day, it signals that Bitcoin has crossed the threshold from alternative investment to mainstream portfolio allocation. The fact that this is happening with relatively low retail participation makes the trend even more significant: this is patient, strategic capital building long-term positions, not momentum-chasing hot money.
For investors watching from the sidelines, the message is clear. The infrastructure for institutional Bitcoin adoption is no longer being built — it’s fully operational. The question is no longer whether traditional finance will embrace Bitcoin, but how quickly the remaining holdouts will follow BlackRock’s lead.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions. Prices and data cited are as reported on May 23, 2025.
IBIT pulling $430M in a single day and leading ALL US ETFs, not just crypto ones. blackrock is eating everyone alive
$131.39 billion in BTC held by US ETFs now. thats 6.11% of total supply and growing. the supply squeeze is real
^ the 6.11% number is what gets me. combine ETFs with microstrategy and satoshi and the float is getting tiny
BTC at 107K and low google trends = institutions buying while retail is nowhere near. classic smart money accumulation pattern