U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds recorded $312 million in net inflows on May 26, with BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) accounting for $179 million of the session total. The flow concentration—57% to a single vehicle—signals institutional preference consolidating around the largest issuer rather than dispersing across the ten-fund complex.
The session marked the eighth consecutive trading day of net inflows across the spot Bitcoin ETF complex, the longest uninterrupted streak since mid-March. Total assets under management in the complex now sit at approximately $108 billion, with IBIT holding $58 billion of that figure. Fidelity's Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund recorded the session's second-largest inflow at roughly $85 million, while the remaining eight funds split $48 million in aggregate flows. No vehicle registered material redemptions.
The pattern matters because institutional allocators typically deploy capital in multi-week campaigns rather than single-day events. May's flow profile—steady, concentrated, unglamorous—resembles the accumulation behavior family offices and registered investment advisers displayed in January and February, before retail volatility returned in March. The current streak lacks the headline velocity of Q1, when daily inflows occasionally topped $1 billion, but the consistency suggests renewed conviction from slower-moving capital pools. BlackRock's dominance within the complex is tightening: IBIT now captures 54% of total complex assets, up from 48% at year-end.
The flow concentration around IBIT and Fidelity—together absorbing 85% of Monday's inflows—reflects two realities. First, institutional mandate committees prefer brand familiarity and scale when allocating to novel asset classes. Second, fee compression has stalled; all ten spot Bitcoin ETFs charge between 0.19% and 0.25%, eliminating price competition as a differentiation vector. The result is a two-issuer oligopoly within a ten-issuer market, with the remaining eight funds competing for scraps of adviser-directed flows.
Operators should monitor Friday's weekly ETF flow summary from Bloomberg Intelligence for confirmation that the streak held through month-end, and whether June 2 flows—the first session of the new month—sustain the pattern or revert to volatility. Family-office allocators typically rebalance on month boundaries; any sharp reversal in the first week of June would suggest May's inflows were tactical rebalancing rather than strategic repositioning. The next Federal Open Market Committee meeting lands June 18, and options expiry for June Bitcoin futures settles June 27.
BlackRock filed the original spot Bitcoin ETF application in June 2023, eleven months before SEC approval arrived in January 2024. The lag between filing and launch allowed the firm to pre-position institutional relationships and educate mandate committees while competitors scrambled. That head start is now visible in the flow data: $179 million entered IBIT on a single Monday in late May, more than the bottom six ETFs in the complex have gathered in total since inception.